Anderson County Review — November 20, 2025
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from November 20, 2025. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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Probitas, Veritas,
Integritas In Summa
C O P Y P R I C E O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
November 20, 2025
SINCE 1865 160th Year, No. 44
The
official
newspaper
of record
for for
Anderson
County,
KS, KS,
and and
its communities.
The
official
newspaper
of record
Anderson
County,
its communi-
E-statements & Internet Banking
www.garnett-ks.com | (785) 448-3121 | review@garnett-ks.com
Member FDIC Since 1899
Are you killing
your own road?
BY DANE HICKS
G
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
ARNETT Rural drivers often gripe about
washboard ripples, deep
ruts and potholes that
jar their vehicles and chew up
suspensions. But county officials
and engineers who study gravel
road maintenance say much of
that damage starts behind the
wheel not just with grading or
gravel supply.
County commissioners
and Anderson County Road
Department Foreman Ethan
Lickteig review road complaints
almost every Monday morning most recently lamenting
a three-day soaking rain that
turned roads to rutted mush,
then sun-dried and packed them
into near concrete consistency to
the chagrin of drivers and road
crews alike. More rain expected
Friday means the mush may be
back, but theres a lot drivers can
do to help, the experts say.
If theyd slow down it would
help a lot, Lickteig said. People
speeding up to a stop sign and
they hit that washboarding
thats already there and get to
bouncing, and that magnifies the
problem.
County staff and commissioners have admitted problems
keeping experienced grader drivers on the countys road crews
the past few years, as inflating
wages made the grass greener
on numerous other construction
crews. But road construction
experts say road building going
all the way back to the Roman
Empire functions by some basic
rules. When water, vehicle
weight and speed conflict, the
outcome is a mess.
Gravel roads are built differently than paved ones. Unlike
SEE ROADS ON PAGE 3
Crypto project
needs juice,
zoning permit
Yoder crypto mining endeavor
wouldnt fall under solar ban
since power wouldnt be sold
BY DANE HICKS
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT
Garnetts
Dunkard Brethren Church is
once again this year partnering with Operation Christmas
Child on a project that sends
Christmas gifts and the words
of the gospel to children in
need worldwide.
Organizer Karen Edgecomb
said the church last year collected 216 shoe boxes and was
looking forward to increasing
that mark this year.
We have three new churches that are packing as a group,
Edgcomb said. Were excited
to see that number rise.
Churches in more
than 100 countries
participate, distributing
gift
filled shoe boxes
to kids in remote
locations
during community outreach events.
Along with the
gifts comes the message of Jesus
Christ. Edgecomb said most
of the kids have never heard
Gospel before. Worldwide,
Operation Christmas Child
has distributed 232 million
shoebox gifts since
1993. The organization collected 11.9
million gift boxes
from participating
churches last year,
which were distributed at over
134,000 outreach
events by trained
local church leaders. The story booklet The
Greatest Gift which accom-
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A Garnett man has filed an
application for a special use permit with
Anderson County to authorize his cryptocurrency mining facility located on
Northwest Missouri Road along the countys
zoning parameters.
Milton Yoder filed the application for
the permit to allow the commercial business location on land zoned A1 agriculture
which is owned by his father, Alvin Yoder
of Welda. He told the Review his operation
had been running about three weeks, with
installation of a stand-alone solar power
source partially completed.
Yoders application specifies the addition
of 72-74 solar panels which would provide
off-grid power to run the computers and
cool the facilities used for the digital mining operation which instead of breaking
actual ground mines for digital coins by
executing a continual and extensive mathematical barrage of computations seeking to
unlock a strongbox location that only exists
in computational ethereal terms.
Cryptocurrency mining involves using
specialized computers to solve complex
mathematical problems that secure and verify transactions on blockchain networks,
like the one for Dogecoin, earning digital
coins as rewards, Yoder explained in his
application. Essentially its computational
work that maintains a decentralized digital
currency system.
The solar panels would power the operation during the day with surplus electricity
being stored in batteries which would continue to provide power after the sun went
down so the operation could run 24/7 off grid
without relying on utility power, Yoder tod
the Review Wednesday.
For all the headlines cryptocurrencies
generatefrom wild price swings to giant
mining farms landing in rural communities
like Anderson Countythe basics of how
they work remain a mystery to most people.
Strip away the technical jargon, though, and
SEE CRYPTO ON PAGE 3
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-20-2025/ DANE HICKS
Church sends gifts, Gospel, to kids around the world
(785) 448-3111
New city tax takes effect April 1, 2026
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT An ordinance recently
passed by Garnett city commissioners details the effective start date of
the citys new one cent sales tax, a
funding mechanism it hopes will
replace the aging Garnett swimming pool and pay for other city
projects.
Commissioners approved the
ordinance executing the sales tax
increase of an additional 1% to take
effect on the first day of April 2026.
That tax is in addition to the one
half cent sales tax past by voters
SEE TAX ON PAGE 2
SEE BOXES ON PAGE 2
$1,000 payoff will make someones Christmas brighter
GARNETT The first drawing numbers in the 2025 Great
Christmas
Giveaway
shopping promotion
are
published in
todays sponsor advertising
section,
and may end up winning a
lucky shopper supporting our
local businesses $1,000 just in
time for Christmas.
The Great Christmas
Giveaway is back for its 27th
season with a $1,000 grand
prize, and 8 weekly $50 drawing
prizes. But the only way to win
is to shop with
the 15 sponsors
in todays advertising section.
Heres how it
works: Shoppers
bring
their
receipts from any
of the sponsoring merchants to
The Anderson County Review.
Only receipts from the sponsoring merchants qualify in the
contest. Receipts may be placed
in an envelope and left at the
Reviews front door drop box
after hours or on weekends if
players cant make it in during
our business hours.
For
every $10 in receipts from our
sponsoring merchants, players receive one drawing ticket
– the more receipts you turn
in, the more drawing tickets
you receive. You can also get a
free drawing ticket every week
just for stopping by the Review
office at 112 W. 6th in Garnett.
Watch for your ticket number hidden somewhere in one
of the sponsor ads in each ad
SEE $1,000 ON PAGE 2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-20-2025/ DANE HICKS
From left, county commissioners Tony Mersman, Les McGhee, Mike
Blaufuss and county clerk Julie Wettstein draw names from a hat to resolve
a tie for the 5th city council member in two area municipal races. KSA
25-3108 directs the board of canvassers (commissioners) must make a
determination by lot, or random selection, to select the winner. The races
were City of Kincaid Councilmember beween James Kiefer & Mark Hunziger
with 1 vote each, and City of Lone Elm Councilmember Lorrie Morrison,
Kendra Louk, and Austin Louk with 1 vote each. Kiefer and Kendra Louk
won their respective draws.
2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
EARLY NEWSPAPER
DEADLINE
The Nov. 27 Anderson
County Review will be
distributed Wednesday,
Nov. 26. Deadlines for
that edition will be Friday,
November 21.
YOURE GONNA MISS US
The Anderson County
Review will have early deadlines and our offices will
be closed Thursday, Nov.
27 and Friday, Nov 28 for
Thanksgiving. Advertising
and news deadlines will be
5 p.m. Friday Nov. 21. You
wont remember this, so call
us at (785) 448-3121.
THANKSGIVING
REFUSE SCHEDULE
The City of Garnett will alter
their trash pickup schedule for Thanksgiving week.
Mondays route will run as
normal. On Tuesday, Nov.
25, they will do Tuesday
& Wednesday routes and
on Wednesday, Nov. 26
they will do the Thursday &
Friday routes.
SENIOR CENTER
THANKSGIVING DINNER
The Garnett Senior Center,
128 W. 5th, will be serving Thanksgiving dinner at
noon on November 24th.
We will be providing turkey,
mashed potatoes, dressing, gravy and beverages.
Please bring a side dish or
dessert and come join us
for some great food and
good company.
HOLIDAY PARADE
The GACC 55th annual
Christmas parade and lighting ceremony will be on
Nov. 29 at 6:30 p.m. at the
downtown square.
TOYS FOR TOTS
The Review has partnered
this year with the U.S.
Marine Corps Reserve as
a drop location for Toys
for Tots. Donations accepted through November 25.
Donation boxes are located
at Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
112 W. 6th Ave.
$1,000…
FROM PAGE 1
spread in the Review.
If you find one of your
numbers in one of the
ads, call the Review and
present the ticket at our
office before 5 p.m. that
respective Tuesday, and
you automatically win
$50. A total of 8 weekly
winners will be awarded.
Unclaimed weekly prizes
will be redrawn the following week.
The grand prize
number will be in the
Dec. 18 edition and all
receipts must be turned
in for tickets by 5 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 16.
Any unclaimed
prizes as of Thursday,
Dec. 18, will be awarded
to the Grand Prize winner.
All prizes are redeemable only at sponsoring
merchant stores. Check
the double page ad
spread in todays Review
for a complete list of
sponsors & rules.
ANDERSON COUNTY
COMMISSION
NOVEMBER 10, 2025
Chairman Leslie McGhee
called the meeting of the
Anderson County Commission to
order at 9:00 AM on November
10, 2025 at the Anderson County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Leslie McGhee, Present: Michael
Blaufuss, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The Pledge of
Allegiance was recited. Minutes
from the previous meeting were
approved as presented.
Road & Bridge
Ethan Lickteig, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission. Discussion was held
on county roads and repair. The
department is working on clearing brush and trees from right of
ways. The handrail on the gazebo
should be done before Christmas.
General Election Canvass
Julie Wettstein, County Clerk,
met with the commission. She
conducted a canvass of the 2025
city/school election to certify the
official election results.
Rural Fire
Cruz Gillespie, Rural Fire
Coordinator, met with the commission. He would like to purchase an aluminum folding frame
portable tank for the Welda Fire
Station. He received bids from
Nafeco for a 2,500-gallon tank
for $1,905 and from Weis Fire for
a 3,000-gallon tank for $1,872.
Commissioner Mersman moved
and Commissioner Blaufuss seconded to purchase a 3,000-gallon
portable water tank from Weis
Fire for $1,872 to be paid out of
the Rural Fire fund. All voted yes.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00
PM due to no further business.
ANDERSON COUNTY LAND
TRANSFERS
Jessica Devoe to Justin R
Zook and Dakota L Ferguson:
Lots 1 & 2 blk 14 City of Kincaid.
Lester P Yoder to Hosty Rental
LLC: Beg 763.5 feet west & 1130
feet north of secor ne4 13-2019, thence north 209 feet, thence
west 208 feet, thence south 209
feet, thence east 208 feet to pob.
Safe Haven Residential Living
Center LLCP Kincaid to Lucas
Gilley: Lots 17 & 18 blk 17 City of
Kincaid.
Amanda R Jones and
Devin J Bernsten to Amanda
R Jones Trustee, Amanda R
Jones Trust Dated 11-11-2025,
Devin J Bernsten Trustee and
Devin J Bernsten Trust Dated
11-11-2025: Tract r in ne4
34-20-19 described as: beg at
secor ne4 34-20-19, thence south
895205 west trust dated 11-112025 for a distance of 667.25 feet
along south line of said quarter
section to true pob; thence south
trust dated 11-11-2025 895205
west for a distance of 330.00 feet
along south line of said quarter
section; thence north 000309
east for a distance of 1000.00
feet; thence north 450449 east
for a distance of 466.46 feet;
thence south 0000309 west for
TAX…
FROM PAGE 1
in 1998 which will continue
to be assessed against local
retail sales. A public notice
confirming the commissions approval is published
in todays newspaper, and
well be submitted as documentation of the new tax
to the Kansas Director of
Taxation.
Voters approved the new
tax by a healthy 65 percent
margin 341 to 180, although
only 21.5% of registered
BOXES…
FROM PAGE 1
panies the gift boxes and
presents the story of Christ
is available in more than
118 languages. Another
booklet, The Greatest
Journey, relays a discipleship program for Operation
Christmas Child shoebox
recipients, teaching kids
a distance of 1328.62 feet to pob.
Amanda R Jones and Devin
J Bernsten to Amanda R Jones
Trustee and Amanda R Jones
Trust Dated 11-11-2025: S2 lot
227, & all lots 229, 231, 233 & 235
in blk 28 inn what was formerly
Orchard Park Addition to City of
Garnett.
Patricia S Woodward and
Kenneth A Woodward to Patricia
S Woodward and Kenneth A
Woodward: E2 sw4 24-20-19.
ANDERSON COUNTY
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Carl Dewitt Courter was
charged with possession of drugs
and possession of drug paraphernalia.
ANDERSON COUNTY TRAFFIC
CASES FILED
Daniel Long was charged with
failure to comply with construction
zone restrictions.
Ahtsham Ashraf Chaudray was
charged with speeding 45 mph in
a 35 mph zone.
Ethan Gabriel Ohmer was
charged with vehicle liability insurance required.
Victor H Palacio Martinez was
charged with speeding 45 mph in
a 35 mph zone.
Kirsten Renee Roush was
charged with vehicle liability insurance required and speeding 80
mph in a 65 mph zone.
James Edward Greenlee was
charged with speeding 90 mph in
a 65 mph zone.
Janell Lynn Stifter was charged
with failure to yield at stop or yield
sign.
Hunter Joe Tucker was
charged with speeding 81 mph in
a 65 mph zone.
Claire Alannah Martin was
charged with speeding 76 mph in
a 65 mph zone.
Fredrick Kinuthia Kinyanjui was
charged with speeding 78 mph in
a 65 mph zone.
Joseph William Vincent was
charged with speeding 75 mph in
a 65 mph zone.
Cole Adam Boss was charged
with speeding 45 mph in a 35 mph
zone.
Clinton Edward Hays was
charged with speeding 45 mph in
a 35 mph zone.
Peter Saintjohn Knight was
charged with passing on left with
insufficient clearance and yield to
emergency vehicle.
Travis L Maloney was charged
with vehicle liability insurance
required and for not having vehicle registered.
ANDERSON COUNTY
ACCIDENT REPORTS FILED
On November 5, a vehicle driven by Isaac Jaker Hopkins, Iola,
was traveling south on US 169
Highway when he struck a deer.
On November 7, a vehicle driven by Roushell Billbe, Leroy, was
traveling east on 1600 Road when
she struck a deer.
On November 10, a vehicle
driven by Connor Reid Barnett,
Garnett, was traveling west on
1600 Road when he struck a deer.
On November 10, a vehicle
driven by Lester Paul Yoder,
voters in Garnett cast ballots.
Garnetts aging swimming pool was a focal
point of the issue, which
city official say should race
some $600,000 annually to
pay debt incurred for that
project and cover other
items on a wish list that
includes work on the citys
ballfields, campgrounds
and the addition of a performance amphitheater for
Lake Garnett Park, among
others.
Garnett, was traveling westbound
on K-31 Highway when he struck
a deer.
On November 11, a vehicle
driven by Carrie Jo OBrien,
Uniontown, was traveling northbound on US 59 Highway when
she struck a deer.
On November 12, a vehicle
driven by Nichole Dawn Sprague,
Kincaid, was traveling north on
US 59 Highway when she struck
a deer.
On November 13, a vehicle
driven by Mina Nicole Drybread,
Chanute, was traveling on US 169
Highway near NE Neosho Road
when she struck a deer.
On November 15, a vehicle
driven by Kirk Walter Pagenkopf,
Garnett, was traveling south on
US 59 Highway at the 110 mile
marker when he struck a deer.
ANDERSON COUNTY
ARRESTS FILED
On November 14, Andrew
Leon Gifford was arrested for failure to appear.
On November 14, Nathan Tyler
Hazzard was arrested for failure
to appear.
On November 14, James Lee
Ferguson was arrested for failure
to appear.
On November 16, Ryan Patrick
Kernan was arrested for failure to
appear.
On November 16, Carl Dewitt
Courter, was arrested for possession of opiates/opium/narc drug
and certain stimulant and possession of drug paraphernalia.
On November 16, Pleasant
Dakota Courter was arrested for
failure to wear a seatbelt, possession of opiates/opium/narc drug
and certain stimulant and possession of certain hallucinogenic
drugs.
Millers Construction, Inc.
EST. 1980
GARAGE DOOR OPENERS
We sell & service these brands & more.
Everett Miller / Rodney Miller (785) 448-4114
Garnett, KS
Dont be caught
out in a storm.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
(as of October 8, 2025)
William Christopher Lee
Vandenberg was booked into jail
on July 25, 2024.
Porfirio De La Cruz – Cantu
was booked into jail on October
10, 2024.
Kaiden Isaac Robb was booked
into jail on January 7, 2025.
Chad Jerome Roy was booked
into jail on May 22, 2025.
Timothy Dale Moore was
booked into jail on June 28, 2025.
Christopher Martin Kanawyer
was booked into jail on August 19,
2025.
Shi Leilani Kinney was booked
into jail on August 29, 2025.
Cherokee Lane Casida-Razo
was booked into jail on September
18, 2025.
Stephen Ray Putthoff was
booked into jail on September 28,
2025.
Jessica Ray Nichols was
booked into jail on October 6,
2025.
KANSAS GENERATORS
Westphalia, Ks kansasgeneratorsllc@gmail.com (785) 204-2965
2×4 kpa holiday best
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL
FARM-INS
(as of September 3, 2025)
Jesse John King was booked
into jail on March 25, 2025.
Trevor Floyd Summers was
booked into jail on September 2,
2025.
Health Services
DIRECTORY
Dentistry
Family Care
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
Chiropractic
Feel
better! (785) 448-6590
427 S. Oak
Garnett
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
Eye Care
about following Christ and
telling others about Him.
Brochures on the program
are available locally at 7th
Street Grocery, Midwest
Sales & Surplus, Dutch
County Caf, the Garnett
Library, Everything Else,
130 Collectve, ARC Thrift
Store and both local
Mexican restaurants.
Pharmacy
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman
Chiropractic Physician
120 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422
M/W/F: 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
Hospice
Maple & Hwy. 31 MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
School Physicals $35
DOT Physicals
National Registered &
Certified Medical Examiner
Drug/Alcohol tests available.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: $1.50 tacos, rice & beans; $2 Natural Light cans
Tuesday: Sues choice!
Wednesday: Fried chicken
Thursday: Sues homemade meatloaf
ALL AVAILABLE
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
FAMILY-STYLE!
fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
2nd Saturday:
Smothered pork shops
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
Every Sunday
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
PAN-FRIED
CHICKEN
Sunday: Homemade pan-fried chicken w/sides Homemade
Courtney Tucker, Agent
courtney.tucker@agencywestins.com
Auto Health Business & Commercial
Work Comp Bonding Homeowners Life
Recrecreational Vehicle Farm
415 S. Oak St. Garnett (785) 448-2284
We will not be open for business Thursday, Nov. 27, or
Friday, Nov. 28. Highway branch open Saturday.
Garnett Gardner
Princeton
Ottawa
Lake Ozark, Mo.
www.patriotsbank.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
BENTON
MARCH 17, 1944 NOVEMBER 10, 2025
Sharon Kay Benton, Specialist for the Navy. The
age 81, of Garnett, Kansas, structure and discipline
passed away on November she gained from military
10, 2025, at the
service shaped her
University
of
independent way of
Kansas Medical
life. She approached
Center in Kansas
her work with
City, Kansas.
consistency
and
a straightforward
She was born
work ethic.
on March 17,
1944, at St. Marys
In 2017, Sharon
Hospital in Kansas
moved to Guest
Benton Home Estates in
City,
Missouri,
the daughter of
Garnett, Kansas,
Thomas
Ragan
and has lived in
Benton
and
Arlene Garnett for the past seven
(Marcum) Benton. Sharon years.
participated in many orgaSharon was precednizations during her youth ed in death by her father,
life including 4-H with Thomas Ragan Benton and
Oxford Hustlers. Sharon aunt, Donna Reynolds.
graduated from Olathe High
Sharon will be missed by
School with the Class of her mother Arlene Benton;
1962. She went on to attend brothers, Timothy and
Kansas State University, wife Patty Benton, Ron and
earning her bachelors wife Sharon Benton; niecdegree in 1966. While at es, Tana and Julie Benton;
K-State Sharon was a mem- nephews, Brian and wife
ber of the Alpha Chapter Kirsten Benton and Garrett
of Clovia 4-H Scholarship and wife Ruthie Benton,
House and made many Thomas and wife Allison
close life long friends. Benton; great- nieces Elsie
After college Sharon taught and Sophie Benton and
Daniel,
Physical Education in great-nephews,
the school system for two Tate, and Luke Benton.
years. She remained a dedVisitation and the funericated K-State supporter al service was November
17, 2025 at Feuerborn
throughout her life.
Sharon served in the Family Funeral Service in
United States Navy during Garnett. Burial followed in
the Vietnam era, serving the Garnett Cemetery.
three years as an Officer.
Memorial contributions
Her assignments took may be made to the Kansas
her to Pensacola, Florida; 4-H Foundation and left
Memphis,
Tennessee; in the care of the funeral
and Norfolk, Virginia. home. Condolences for the
Following her naval service family can be left at www.
she worked for a contract- feuerbornfuneral.com.
ing company as Education
HUETTENMUELLER
OCTOBER 25, 1959 NOVEMBER 11, 2025
John Huettenmueller,
age 66, of Shawnee, Kansas,
passed away on Tuesday,
November 11, 2025, at his
home.
A rosary will be recited
on Thursday, November
20, 2025, at 1:00 P.M. at St.
Johns Catholic Church
in Greeley, Kansas with
visitation following. Mass
of Christian Burial will
begin at 2:00 P.M. at St.
Johns Catholic Church.
Burial will take place at St.
Johns Catholic Cemetery,
Greeley.
PSRT decorates before
November 12 meeting
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail
members decorated the
Harris Park and the Santa
Fe Depot on Wednesday
afternoon, November 12,
2025.
They
held
their
November trail meeting
at the depot once the decorating was done. It was
announced that the PSRT
30th anniversary celebration would be June 6, 2026.
Denise Weber will be the
committee chairman. The
Golf Cart rides will be held
again next year on June 10,
2026.
President Ruth Theis
thanked Susan Wettstein
for her good job organizing
the Walking Club this year.
There will not be a
December meeting. The
next regular meeting will
be January 14, 2026. After
the meeting the members
enjoyed a Pre-Christmas
meal together.
Colony Christian Church packed
shoeboxes for Christmas project
Steve Green and Speed
Elsasser led worship singing accompanied by Ben
Prasko on keyboard. Songs
were "How Great is Our
God," "What a Friend We
Have in Jesus" and "Jesus
Paid it All."
Vicki Smart, Mary
Parrot, Shirley McGhee,
Carrie Riebel and Jan
Elsasser presented the
elders with quilts made by
their sewing and quilting
group Seams of Love.
In the Communion
Meditation Bruce Symes
described the polar opposite way Jesus and Satan
are both referred to as lions
in scripture. Jesus is the
mighty Lion of Judah who
protects us from Satan.
Satan prowls like a lion
looking for someone to
devour.
Flint Riebel read Psalm
100 as a prelude to Pastor
Chase Riebel 's sermon
about Thanksgiving. Paul
and Silas were beaten and
imprisoned for their apostolic work. Still they were
singing praises to God with
joy filled hearts in their
prison cells. God sent an
earthquake which freed all
the prisoners but rather
than go free Paul ministered to the prison guard
resulting in the guard and
his whole family being baptized.
Following the service
a potluck dinner was held
and shoeboxes were packed
for Samaritan's Purse
Operation Christmas Child
project.
Obituary Charges/Policy
Full obituaries are published as Submitted in the Review at the rate
of 20 per word and include a photo at no charge. Death notices are
published free and include name, date of birth and death and service
information. A photo may be added to a death notice for a $10 fee.
Obituaries, jpeg photos and death notices may be emailed to review@
garnett-ks.com with a phone number for confirmation. Payment may
be arranged through your funeral home or directly with The Review. We
accept all major credit cards. Questions?
Call The Review at (785) 448-3121.
3
OBITUARIES
Senior Center pitch
results for 10/13
On the 13th of November
we had 15 players for
Thursday night pitch. The
results of the 10 games
played are as follows: Jan
Wards took top honor winning nine of 10 games; Kyle
Trendel had the most hands
of 13 with three; Mike Kilet
won the 50/50 and Karen
ROADS…
FROM PAGE 1
asphalt or concrete, these
surfaces rely on a wellshaped crown and packed
aggregate that shed water,
endure traffic and they
remain stable only when
driving behaviour supports them. According
to the Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA),
proper maintenance elements for stable gravel
roads include a crowned
driving surface and reliable shoulders.
But what do you do when
youve got to get to town
on a wet day? If you want
your road to last longer,
experts say, find a route
to hard pavement even if
it takes you longer to get
to your destination. If you
cant get to pavement just
slow down. They say simple
driver habits can dramatically reduce damage and
maintenance costs and
shortcut the wait for your
grader operator to get to
your road.
Slow Down
High speeds can scatter
gravel, flatten the crown
(the raised center of the
road that sheds water) and
create vibrations that lead
to washboarding. Research
has shown that washboard
patterns form more quickly when traffic speeds are
higher on granular surfaces.
Brake and Accelerate Gently
Hard stops and quick
launches dig out soft sections of the road and leave
loose rock. A German road
study on gravel pavement
recently dynamics found
that road surface deformation under accelerating/
decelerating loads contributes to surface defects.
Avoid Deepening the Ruts
When tires repeatedly
follow the same groove,
ruts deepen, drainage is
impaired, and regular
maintenance loses effectiveness. The Maine Roads
group reports that even one
heavy truck trip on a wet
gravel road can cause damage equivalent to hundreds
of cars.
Stay Off the Edges
The soft shoulder area of
a gravel road is not meant
for regular travel. Driving
too close to the edge weakens the crown that channels water off-road, says
the FHA causing edge ero-
Register won the least number of games.
Please come join us on
Thursday evening promptly at six o'clock at the Senior
Center for a fun evening of
13-point pitch and snacks
provided by the players.
Always room for one more.
Jan Wards reporting
sion and pothole formation.
FHWA guidelines emphasize maintaining slope and
shape for drainage.
Keep Heavy Loads for Dry
Days
Heavy vehicles traveling
over wet or thawing gravel crush the aggregate and
destroy crown geometry.
The same Maine Roads
commentary shows that
heavy vehicle trips on wet
surfaces accelerate deterioration significantly.
Dont Spin Your Tires on
Hills
Tire spin digs out material, creates soft spots and
invites washout when rain
follows. Laboratory studies
of washboarding confirm
that vehicle dynamics
such as wheel hop and slip
correlate with surface
corrugation development.
Respect the Road Crown
Gravel roads are constructed with a slight ridge
in the middle so water
drains off. Flattening that
crown by repeated driving
in the same track blocks
drainage; resulting standing water causes potholes
and soft spots.
Take It Easy After Grading
After the road has been
freshly graded, the surface
needs time to settle and
pack. Heavy or fast traffic
too soon scatters new material and undoes the work.
The FHWA manual outlines how traffic patterns
following grading impact
life-cycle cost.
Avoid Muddy or Thawing
Roads
During spring thaw or
after heavy rain, the underlying base weakens. Traffic
under those conditions
often causes permanent
deformations that turn into
potholes or washboard.
Studies of gravel pavement
deterioration note that
moisture plus traffic equals
quicker failure.
Report Problems Instead of
Fixing Them
Blocked ditches, collapsed culverts or bad
crown shape should be
flagged with the county
road department not
patched by individuals with
a mini-grader. Improper
adjustments to drainage or
shape can backfire. Road
construction manuals used
by the Federal Highway
Administration
stress
drainage and correct aggregate preparation as foundational.
We will not be open for business
Thursday, November 27.
We will close at 3 p.m. Friday, November 28.
We will re-open for normal
business hours Monday.
www.fsbkansas.com
The search for
the narrow road
Sometimes when writing a weekly article it is
difficult to know what to
emphasize. A text which
has become one of my
favorites is Matthew 7:1314 which reads, Enter
through the narrow gate.
For wide is the gate and
broad is the road that leads
to destruction, and many
enter through it. But small
is the gate and narrow the
road that leads to life, and
only a few find it. I have
often wondered where the
narrow road leads? I have
pieced together the following scriptures that I believe
will offer us a glimpse of
heaven, the ultimate destination of the narrow road.
In Revelation 21:21 we
read the following description of the streets in heaven. The great street of the
city was pure gold, like
transparent glass. This
text reveals to us that gold
will have no value in heaven. Revelation 22:1-2 reads,
Then the angel showed
me the river of the water
of life, as clear as crystal,
flowing from the throne of
God and the lamb down the
middle of the great street
of the city. On each side
of the river stood the tree
of life bearing twelve crops
of fruit, yielding its fruit
every month. And the
leaves of the tree are for
the healing of the nations.
Ultimately I believe the
narrow road will lead us
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
face to face with Jesus.
In Revelation 21:5 God
says. I am making everything new! For us that
means a new body, a resurrection body. A body that
no longer will be subject to
death, mourning or crying
or pain for the old order
of things has passed away.
When we come to the end of
the narrow road we will be
at the Holy City, the New
Jerusalem where we shall
dwell with God forever.
Paul in 2 Corinthians 4:17
explains it well when he
says. For our light and
momentary troubles are
achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs
them all. So we fix our eyes
not on what was seen but
on what is unseen. For
what is seen is temporal,
but what is unseen is eternal. Good reason to find
the narrow road.
Ministry on the
Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side
of the Door
Like David Bilderback
CRYPTO…
FROM PAGE 1
crypto is a simple idea: a
form of digital value that no
one controls, created and
maintained by the people
who use it.
Dogecoin, the target
of Yoders operation, and
the more broadly familiar
Bitcoin, are broadly different. Bitcoin is more like
digital gold, while Dogecoin
was developed as a joke by
programers lapooning the
overstated seriousness of
other crypto currencies.
But Dogecoing began to
build its own following
among gamers and developed a use and value separate from Bigcoin.
Only 21 million Bitcoin
will ever exist and their
scarcity forms a base of
value among those who
transact them. Dogecoin is
an inflationary meme-coin.
Its unlimited supply is less
valuable and used mainly
for tipping, fun, and speculation. They run on different rules, have different
goals, and behave differently economically.
At their core, cryptos exist as massive public record bookscalled
the blockchainthat are
shared across thousands
of computers worldwide.
This description aligns
with the way Blockchain.
com explains the system: a
public, decentralized ledger that acts as a global
accounting book, visible
to everyone. In practical
terms, it functions like a
global checking register
that no bank or government can secretly alter.
Scarcity drives Bitcoins
value. The Brookings
Institution notes that this
fixed supply is a central
reason many investors
compare Bitcoin to gold
and believe it has long-term
value. In a world where
governments can print currency at will, Bitcoins predetermined supply appeals
to those looking for an
inflation-resistant asset.
Keeping this decentralized system honest is the
job of miners who operate specialized computers
that validate transactions
and secure the system by
competing to solve complex mathematical problems. Their machines act
like security guards and
accountants for the network, ensuring each trans-
action follows the rules and
that no one can spend the
same crypto twice.
Mining also serves as
Bitcoins defense system.
The mathematics miners perform require enormous amounts of electricity, which Bankrate
and Investopedia say is
intentional: the energy
cost makes it prohibitively
expensive for criminals to
forge transactions or alter
the blockchain. In return
for this work, miners
receive newly created bitcoinsa process Coinbase
describes as the way new
coins enter circulation,
similar to how gold is introduced into the market only
after miners extract it.
Cryptocurrencies are
worth money for the same
reason gold, cattle, or even
U.S. dollars have value:
people agree it has value.
According to Fidelity
Investments digital assets
research, Bitcoins value
comes from four main
driversscarcity, security, global usefulness, and
market demand. Millions
of people worldwide use
or hold Bitcoin, and as
adoption grows, so does its
price. The network itself
has never been hacked at
its core, a fact frequently
highlighted in industry
research, contributing further to public trust.
The price, however,
is notoriously volatile.
Because supply is fixed,
even small changes in global demand can send prices soaring or tumbling.
Investopedia notes that
speculation, halving cycles,
and the relatively young
age of the asset class all
contribute to Bitcoins dramatic price swings.
Mining operations continue to appear across
the U.S.including rural
regions of Kansasfor
one simple reason: mining
converts electricity into
money.
The solar connection
for Yoders project doesnt
qualify as an industrial
solar operation because
its power will be user
consumed and not resold.
Industrial solar is presently banned in Anderson
County by the execution
of a previous moratorium,
although commissioners
said Monday that moratorium had recently expired.
4
Awarded more than 60 times for excellence in news, opinion and advertsing by
newspaper professionals across the country but our highest honor is your readership.
OPINION
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
To save the planet, weve got to pave the planet
Whoda thunk it unless youre familiar with the ironic twist in Seinfeld,
Season 2, Episode 9, The Deal…that climate activists would determine they had
to cut 100,000 Amazonian rainforest trees
in order to pave a road to their upcoming
climate summit in Belem, Brazil.
Yes, the irony is delicious.
(Footnote: For our readers under age 50,
Seinfeld was a comedy series on something known as television, back in the
1990s, when entertainment programming
was still actually entertaining. Google it.)
But I digressyes, cutting down nearly
100,000 Amazonian trees to build a fourlane highway to their own climate summit;
climate kooks have managed to bulldoze
their own message along with the landscape.
The activists and Brazilian officials
always ready to exploit the worlds climate carping for their own benefit explain
that this clear-cut was necessary, and
planned all the way back to 2020 and initially unrelated to tomorrows conference.
Recent defenders of the 2025 sky-is-falling gig maintain its a small sacrifice for
the greater good of planetary salvation.
With dour-faced celebrities burning tons
of jet fuel flying chartered jets to these
conferences instead of flying coach like us
unwashed, the echoes of do as we say, not
as we do comes through again loud and
clear. Its just rare to see it expressed in
asphalt.
Lets be honest: if an American corporation proposed mowing down 100,000
rainforest trees for a highway project, the
outcry would register on the Richter scale.
David Muir would have a nervous breakdown. Social media would collapse into a
slurry of meme hashtags. Protesters would
chain themselves to bulldozers faster than
you could say eco-catastrophe and Greta
Thunberg would beat the bushes looking
for someone to detain her.
But when the cause is The Movement
itself? Suddenly, the chainsaws are powered by moral purity.
This is the uncomfortable truth environ-
mental leaders cant confront: when ideals
collide with logistics, ideals tend to lose.
Moving thousands of delegates, media,
researchers, and dignitaries through dense
jungle terrain doesnt happen with good
intentions and hemp tote bags. It happens
with machinery, fuel, andapparentlya
highway carved straight through the rainforest.
The global climate movement has spent
decades portraying modern infrastructure
as the enemy instead of the byproduct of a
dominant species. But when activists need
the convenience of four lanes of pavement
to reach their own summit, the bulldozers
roar to life without hesitation.
Pragmatic folks have long argued that
environmental policy must be grounded
in realism rather than utopian fantasy.
The world still needs roads, energy, and
functioning economies. We can debate the
smartest ways to manage resources, but
denying basic human infrastructure needs
or abandoning practical, proven energy
production has never been a serious plan.
This highway fiasco is a case study in what
happens when activism collides with the
realities of the modern world. Its easy to
preach carbon-free living from a conference hall with air-conditioning, Wi-Fi, and
catered meals.
If climate leaders want to be taken
seriously, they might start by applying
to themselves the same standards they
demand of everyone else. ###
The Anderson County Reviews
Facebook. Folks might check on that before
they come out of the doctors in January.
PHONE FORUM
I want to take a few minutes to say thank
you to all those who helped an old lady in
the wheelchair. I did not get their names.
A lady from Colony stopped and helped me
get my trash out in the trash cans.
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
It looks like our pharmacy is no longer
going to accept TCare and Express Scripts
as of January 1st, which means all active
and retired military and veterans will
have to find another pharmacy, which the
closest one is 26 miles in each direction.
Maybe its a good time to look for a different physician if youre going to have to
drive there just to get your pills, after you
go to the doctor.
Theres other insurances that theyre
not going to accept as well, according to
A very expensive lesson for Marion County, Ks
Justice, it seems, some days is served.
In a dramatic move unforeseen by
many, Marion County officials have
agreed to pay more than $3 million to
settle their part of a federal-court lawsuit
brought by The Marion County Record
and others after a surprise police raid on
homes and the newspaper.
As part of the settlement, the Kansas
county, its sheriff and officials agreed
to publish a formal apology to the newspaper, its owners, Eric Meyer and his
mother, the late Joan Meyer, and a City
Council member and her husband.
The settlement also includes two
reporters with the newspaper during
the raid, conducted Aug. 11, 2023, at the
newspaper; at the home shared by the
Meyers and his mother; and the home of
former Vice Mayor Ruth Herbel and her
husband Ron.
The lawsuit remains pending against
the City of Marion, former Mayor David
Mayfield, former Police Chief Gideon
Cody and former officer Zach Hudlin, in
federal district court for the District of
Kansas, the read bad guys of the raid,
one lawyer called them.
The payments include:
$200,000 personally to Eric Meyer,
whose cell phone and two computers
were seized, his house and desk searched.
$250,000 to former reporter Deb
Gruver, who left town after the raid citing stress.
$300,000 to the Record, which had its
operations disrupted, and three comput-
GUEST COMMENTARY
STEVE HAYNES, Haynes Publishing Co.
ers and a file server unlawfully seized.
$600,000 to reporter Phyllis Zorn,
who saw her cell phone seized and suffered aggravation of a previous medical
disorder. She quit the paper after the settlement, citing continued stress working
in the county.
$650,000 to Herbel and her husband,
whose dementia was aggravated by the
raid on his home.
$1 million to the estate of Joan Meyer,
who suffered a fatal cardiac arrest the
day after the raid. Video showed it greatly aggravated her. At one point, she
shouted: Get out of my house.
Earlier, a $50,000 settlement was paid
to the newspapers business manger, who
suffered aggravation of health problems.
Meyer and his lawyers considered the
apology a key part of the settlement. Outof-court settlements generally involve
a statement that the defendants do not
admit doing anything wrong.
It reads, The Sheriffs Office wishes
to express its sincere regrets to Eric
and Joan Meyer and Ruth and Ronald
Herbel for its participation in the drafting and execution of the Marion Police
Departments search warrants on their
homes and The Marion County Record.
This likely would not have happened if
established law had been reviewed and
applied prior to the execution of the warrants.
One thing the paper thought was
important was that the statement made
clear that state and federal laws restrict
attempts to search newspapers and other
media.
The Record reported that the countys
insurance will cover $3 million of the settlement, leaving $50,000 to be paid from
county funds. Meyer said he had no wish
to see the county broke, but was glad the
commissioners will have to come up with
money from their budget, in addition to
legal fees. The settlements cover part of
the plaintiffs legal fees.
Every police officer should know that
they cant punish someone for their political speech, the Herbels lawyer, Jared
McClain of the Institute for Justice, told
the Record, and every police officer
should know that they need probable
cause to enter someones home and
search their phone and computer.
Yet the sheriffs office helped draft
bogus warrants designed to retaliate
against Ruth Herbel for her work as
SEE HAYNES ON PAGE 10
Trump deal makes Ozempic available to more of us
Americans are going to get a little
healthier. President Trump cut deals
with the drugmakers Eli Lilly and Novo
Nordisk to increase access to obesity
drugs in a major benefit to American
public health.
The agreements are a win-win-win
— good for consumers, good for the companies and good for Trump.
One of the most irrational superstitions of our time is that Big Pharma,
which has long been routinely delivering near-miraculous therapeutics to
extend and improve our lives, is a public
enemy. Its latest breakthrough is a class
of so-called GLP-1 drugs that make it easier to lose weight and to avoid associated
serious health problems, from Type 2
diabetes to heart disease.
The basic dynamic of the Trump deals
is that the companies will, through lower
prices, expand their market share, thus
generating more revenue. The companies also get tariff relief and expedited
review for select drugs.
Health and Human Services Secretary
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the MAHA leader
with a paranoid streak about modern
medical advances, has been hostile to
GLP-1 drugs, the most famous of which
is Ozempic, sold by Novo Nordisk.
If everyone could do as many pushups
and pullups as the hyper-fit 71-year-old
Kennedy, perhaps we could turn our
back on GLP-1s.
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
Certainly, RFK Jr. is correct that
Americans should eat better and work
out more. But our body mass index has
been increasing for about 150 years, as
weve made calories cheaper and more
abundant over time. As it happens, the
things that we like to eat or drink that
are bad for us — fast food, soda, chips,
cookies — are cheap, convenient and taste
good.
Even if we manage to convince people
that they should eat more fruit, vegetables and legumes, while taking a Peloton
class every day, not everyone is going to
do it as a matter of lifestyle constraints,
individual preference or simple lack of
willpower.
Theres also the fact that once you put
on weight, physiological changes make it
more difficult to shed it.
About 40% of Americans are obese.
Wouldnt it be great for them — and for
American society at large, which spends
roughly $170 billion a year on obesity-related medical costs — if there were a safe,
relatively convenient way for them to
slim down?
Lo and behold, here it is. The GLP-1s
started out as a treatment for diabetes and have exploded in popularity as
weight-loss drugs.
Trumps reflex to make it easier for
people to obtain Ozempic and the like
— while, not incidentally, boosting his
reputation as the nations foremost dealmaker — is the correct one. Drug pricing is complicated, but by expanding
the sale of the drugs direct to consumers, the companies can reduce prices.
Meanwhile, Medicare will do more to
cover the drugs, also bringing down their
cost.
According to Gallup, about 12% of
Americans report having used a GLP-1
drug at some point for weight loss, a
stunning increase from about 6% in
early 2024. Not coincidentally, Gallup is
also now showing a slight dip in obesity. From 2008 — when the polling organization regularly began asking about
weight — to 2022, the percentage of obese
Americans increased by 14 percentage
points, to nearly 40%.
SEE LOWRY ON PAGE 5
And then the few days later, I had a gentleman that lives about three miles outside
of Garnett help me with trash and to put
things in my car. Also wanted to thank all
those who helped me get the Laundromat
and to unload my wheelchair and clothes
and to help afterwards. I wanted to thank
those back at the nursing home on North
Pine for their help and helping me with my
wheelchair each time I visit my husband.
Also want to take a few minutes to say
thank you to the Phone Forum, to allow us
to have these comments to be made. And
SEE FORUM ON PAGE 7
Contact your elected leadership:
President Donald Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(785) 296-3232
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Senator Roger Marshall
Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
3rd Dist. Congressman
Sharice Davids
1541 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2865
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
9th Dist. Rep
Fred Gardner
State Capitol Room512-N
Topeka, KS 66612
Office: (785) 296-7451
fred.gardner@house.ks.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
Lovers of freedom, anxious for the fray.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REPUBLICAN,
THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER,
THE GARNETT JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW,
THE GREELEY GRAPHIC AND THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
EST. 1865
Published with gusto each Thursday by Garnett Publishing,
Inc., and entered as Periodicals class mail at Garnett, Ks.,
66032, under USPS permit #214-200
Anderson County Review, P.O. Box 409, Garnett, Ks., 66032
(785) 448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
GAROLD DANE HICKS, PUBLISHER
Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2025
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
Button identified for my nephew
Well, Im in the identification business once again.
This time its my nephew
from Manhattan. Im not
sure where he found this
button while metal detecting, but it sure cleaned up
magnificently.
During my research I
found it to be a button from
a mail carriers coat.
P.O.D. stands for: Post
Office Dept. These brass
buttons with the P.O.D.
insignia on them were the
standard mail carriers coat
buttons from around 1893-
LOWRY
FROM PAGE 4
Where any number of fashionable diets and continual
government exhortations
for more physical exertion
have failed (before RFK
Jr., Michelle Obama was
urging, Lets Move!),
drugs to slow digestion and
reduce the urge to eat are
working.
The percentage of
Americans using GLP-1s
will inevitably keep growing, especially if prices continue to go down, if more
oral GLP-1s come online in
addition to injectables, and
110 years ago…Thanksgiving game expected to have largest crowd in school history
DIGGING UP THE PAST
THAT WAS THEN
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
PAULA SCOTT REVIEW HISTORY COLUMNIST
1970.
Another mystery solved.
Respectfully Submitted by:
26Nov2025 – Henry Roeckers
if other medical benefits
of the drugs emerge. GLP1s could easily match the
saturation level of statins,
the cholesterol-reducing
drugs.
By all means, we should
all eat more arugula. Until
then, we have found a pharmaceutical path to alleviating an ongoing health crisis. President Trump and
the drug companies are to
be congratulated for their
creative cooperation to
make it available to more
Americans.
Rich Lowry is editor of the
National Review.
Advertise.
Call (785) 448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
OPEN
FOR
5
HISTORY
Historical gleanings from past
local newspapers.
1885 – 140 years ago
November 20 – Sheriff Marshall
went west on the 10 a.m. train. As he
never tells anybody his business we
dont know where he went nor what
for. He is one of these quiet fellows
whom reporters cannot tap. He simply smiles blandly and that is all.
November 20 – Workmen carelessly left a bucket of coals on the roof
of the unfinished Mellen building, a
day last week, when the wind blew a
coal out of the bucket which lodged
in a crack and was soon fanned into
a blaze by the strong wind. One of the
gas men saw the blaze, gave the alarm
and the fire was extinguished.
1895 – 130 years ago
November 22 – The water in the
city lake is still going down. If the
lake should freeze up at the present
stage, the water supply is settled so
far as that source of supply is concerned.
1915 – 110 years ago
November 25 – The annual
Thanksgiving football game is to be
played this year between the Garnett
High School and Osawatomie. This
will probably be witnessed by the
largest crowd of any game in the history of the school.
1925 – 100 years ago
November 26 – Last Sunday evening, as Sam P. Davis, who lives
south of Garnett was returning from
a trip west of town, he was met by a
party of three boys on the Wardell
bridge who angled
their car across the
bridge and forced
Davis to stop. Two of
the young chaps, produced revolvers, and
he was forced to give
up what money he had
in his pockets. They
also took out a spark
plug to cripple his car.
but Davis was game.
He had an extra spark
plug and came on to
town and procured a
revolver. He then took
the back track and
overtook the young
robbers near Mont
Ida. He got the drop
on them and forced
them to give back the
money they had taken
and let them go, with- THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-20-2025 / ARCHIVE
out identification. No
doubt the young hold- Circa November 2005 Terry Singer jumps out of the
ups are local talent. jack-in-the-box on a float sponsored by the Prairie
The proper thing for Spirit Trail. Surprise of Christmas won the award
Mr. Davis to have for best open-class float in the Garnett Christmas
done was to take an Parade on Saturday, Nov. 26.
officer along with him
when he went back in
search of the guys and arrest them will be furnishing of the armory
and bring them to town for identifica- with expectation of working for the
tion. By turning them loose, there was establishment of a Capper Memorial
nothing to prevent them from holding Museum here. It was felt that greater
up somebody else. They should have unity would be obtained if all organizations were represented and broader
been arrested and punished.
contacts could be made.
1935 – 90 years ago
November 21 – A union
1975 – 50 years ago
Thanksgiving service sponsored
November 20 – After writing
by the Ministerial Alliance will words to western songs since she
be held at the Christian church on was ten years old, Shirley Carter,
Wednesday evening November 27, at Garnett, finally got up the nerve to
7:30. The community is invited to submit one for publication and to
her surprise, it has been accepted.
attend and take part in this service.
Mrs. Carter received word from
Columbine Records that her song,
1955 – 70 years ago
November 25 – Representatives of Theres A House On The Corner
the majority of Garnetts clubs will will be released in an album entitled
meet at 8:00 oclock Monday evening, The Now Sounds of Today. Mrs.
Nov. 28, in the basement of the United Carter is a native of Ozark, Ark., and
Presbyterian church, immediately has lived in Garnett about five years.
following the Lions club, to organize She said she began performing with
a council, dedicated to carry forward her mother at churches when she was
community projects. Probably the quite young.
first major effort of the new group
BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
Turneys Service
1275 Underwood Rd Burlington, Ks.
Mon-Fri 8-6 Closed Sundays
We sell & service these brands & more.
…unless you like customers.
(785) 448-3121
Traditional Pennsylvania
Dutch Cooking
Dutch Country Cafe
PRINTING
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
review@garnett-ks.com
Garnett, KS
Everett Miller / Rodney Miller (785) 448-4114
ADVERTISE HERE
(785) 448-8222
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
GARAGE DOOR OPENERS
DONT
ATV/SXS Repair
Cooper Kenda
Millers Construction, Inc.
EST. 1980
Restaurant Coffee Shop Bakery Catering
Banquet and Conference Rooms available
Call (785) 448-5711
309 N. Maple Garnett Mon-Sat 6 AM-2:30 PM
Millers
Fencing
& Welding
Specializing in
barbed wire
fence
& corrals
Aaron Miller
(785) 433-3878
Hecks Moving Service
Howard Yoder
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 489-2212
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Inspected Facility
Ashton Heck
1-800-823-8609
Post Frame Construction
Residential Slab Homes
www.yutzyconstruction.com
(785) 204-0369
You saw this.
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
Matters
So will your
customers.
Advertise here
for just $9/week.
(785) 448-3121
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Just 9 bucks
a block per week
to list your
business here!
(785) 448-3121
6
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
LOCAL
Elevate the comfort of home by offering the perfect combination of style, relaxation and rejuvenation.
Power Space
Saver!
Sug. Retail: $2,729
Our Price: $2,049
Power Rocker
Recliner!
SUPER
SALE
SUPER
SALE
$869
$1599
Sug. Retail: $2,659
Our Price: $1,999
Sug. Retail: $1,449
Our Price: $1,089
Big Mans Space Saver Recliner
Space Saver Recliner
Power Rocker Recliner
Heat,
Massage &
Headtilt!
SUPER
SALE
Enjoy unexpected perks with the Carter power reclining sectional.
$1639
SUPER
SALE
$1049
SUPER
SALE
Sug. Retail: $1,759
Our Price: $1,319
$499
SUPER
SALE
Sug. Retail: $829
Our Price: $629
Looking for durable
power recline?
SUPER
SALE
Find it here at Baumans!
SUPER
SALE
BLACK
NOVEMBER
Baumans Gallery of Rest
Frame & Mechanics
on Power (Motor Electrical)
available on a wide selection
of reclining sofas, loveseats
and recliners from
Best Home Furnishings!
Rocker Recliner
SUPER
SALE
$649
Sug. Retail: $1,089
Our Price: $819
SUPER
SALE
$1239
Sug. Retail: $2,079
Our Price: $1,559
Rocking
Reclining Loveseat
Take Advantage
of Huge
Discounts on
All In-stock
Mattresses to
Make Room for
Our New Lines!
$2999!
Our Best
Stearns & Foster
Queen Set
Page 3
Our Biggest
holiday month
of savings
STARTS NOW!
S a le En
No v. 3 ds
0
Starting at
Reclining
Sofa
USA Made All Hardwood Frame
3 Year Warranty
$3459
Sug. Retail: $5,779
Our Price: $4,339
$1199
Sug. Retail: $2,009
Our Price: $1,519
Lifetime Warranty
$1169
Sug. Retail: $1,959
Our Price: $1,469
5-Piece Power
al with
Reclining Section
& Lumbar
Power Headrests
Our Biggest Holiday
Savings!
Month of Savings Is Super
Sale on ELECTRIC BIKES!
Undwerway Now!
See store for
details!
Twin starting at $199
Full starting at $299
SPECIAL!
Upgrade from Mattress Set
to a Full Motion Queen Base
Queen starting at $399
.
Black November Starting at $599
King starting at $499
Do you have a nice mattress set for your holiday guests & relatives to sleep on?
(Head/Foot)
(If not purchased with a set…starting at $799)
Page 4
Prices
Too Low To
Advertise!
EP-012W
SUPER
SALE
$799
EB15
SUPER
SALE
$799
EB7+
SUPER
SALE
$749
EB7
SUPER
SALE
$699ECRWS
Our Price: $1,199 Our Price: $999 Our Price: $899 Our Price: $849
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
PAWSITIVE TAILS pet adoption
CALENDAR
Thursday, November 20, 2025
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch &
Snacks at Garnett Senior
Center
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics
Anonymous
Friday, November 21, 2025
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Saturday, November 22, 2025
11:00 a.m. – Stay & Play hosted
by the Garnett Public Library
(Ages 0-5 with caregivers)
Monday, November 24, 2025
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
9:30 a.m. – Anderson Legion
Auxiliary Meeting
12:00 p.m. – Senior Center
Thanksgiving Meal
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Hot Yoga with
Jenelle
6:00 p.m. – Library Board Mtg
7:00 p.m. – American Legion
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Housing
Authority Advisory Board
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
10:00 a.m. – Storytime hosted
by the Garnett Public Library
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:00 p.m. – ACDA Advisory
Board Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – Planning Commission
6:30 p.m. – American Legion
Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics
Anonymous
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
6:30 p.m. – Awana
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Thanksgiving
Friday, November 28, 2025
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Saturday, November 29, 2025
4:00 p.m. – Garnett Fire Dept.
Chili & Soup Supper
6:30 p.m. – GACC Christmas
Parade & Lighting Ceremony
Monday, December 1, 2025
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga Cancelled
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-20-2025 / SUBMITTED
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-20-2025 / SUBMITTED
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Rail decorated Harris Park & the Santa Fe Depot for the holidays. Members assisting include Richard & Denise Weber, Susan Wettstein, Glenna & Kent
Murray, Brenda Weiss, David Theis, Joyce Malone, Ruth Theis. Members assisting but not
pictured include Ed & Dee Harris, Pat Otto, Mike & Helen Norman, Rick & Diane Doran.
FORUM…
FROM PAGE 4
again, thank you for all
those who helped me in the
past.
So the school district is promoting on Facebook their
listening sessions. When
they say they want to listen
to your opinion it usually means theyre greasing
us up for a bond issue and
a tax increase at least if
the past is any example. I
want them to listen to me
about this 19 percent budget increase. Four million
dollars ought to buy a lot of
listening. Thank you.
Thank you to the Garnett
Fire Department, I was
sorry to take you away
from your family briefly
on Sunday night to confirm
all is well when my carbon
monoxide alarm was chirping. I was fairly certain all
was good, but appreciate
your quick response to confirm that. Thank you also
to those whom the call took
them away from. We appreciate the sacrifice that they
have given to our community. Thank you.
Sure is nice in the west
central part of Anderson
County we have no rock on
the gravel roads. We have
rock on the blacktop roads
trying to fill in the bridges
thats falling out, and oh, by
the way, you need to come
over and check them again
because theyre getting bad.
MISSION:
Make Christmas a little brighter.
Please help out by dropping off a new,
unwrapped toy at Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
112 W. 6th, Garnett, by the end of the day
November 25, 2025.
Sponsored locally by
The United States Marine Corps Reserve and
The Anderson County Review.
And the minimal maintenance roads have got six
inch ruts cut down from
people going down them
muddin. My suggestion is
at the county lines, we need
to put up minimum maintenance signs instead of slow
signs. Thank you.
Okay Mr. Locke, youve got
your money. Now do us all
a favor and leave Garnett.
Meet Boo! She is a gorgeous 6-year-old brown and white
in color, Corgi/Pembroke//Australian Shepherd mix. This
sweet girl is medium size (25-59LBS) and looking for her
loving forever home. Boo is spayed, microchipped, current
on age-appropriate vaccinations and flea/tick/heartworm
prevention. Her adoption fee is $300. Meet-and-greets
will be scheduled with approved adopters. If you are interested in our beautiful Boo, please fill out an application at
PawsitiveTailsKC.org.
Enjoy your
Thanksgiving!
Baumans will close at 2 p.m.
Wednesday Nov. 26 and remain closed
for the day on Thursday.
Well resume our
normal store hours
on Friday, Nov. 28th.
805 N. Maple Garnett (785) 448-3216
M-F 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-4
8
GCG
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
THE REVIEWS 27TH ANNUAL
$1,000 GRAND PRIZE!
RULES
1. Collect your receipts and coupons dated Nov. 13-Dec.
16 from any of these participating merchants, and bring
your receipts and coupons to Garnett Publishing each
week. Receipts must be turned in by 5 p.m. Dec. 16.
2. For every $10 spent at these participating merchants,
receive one ticket (excludes bank deposits). Maximum
250 tickets per receipt. Take your receipts and coupons
to Garnett Publishing to receive your tickets.
3. In additon to sales receipts, Garnett Publishing will
issue one ticket per week, per household, no purchase
necessary. Simply stop by 112 W. 6th Avenue in Garnett
to get your weekly ticket. Garnett Publishing, Inc. is also
a participating merchant and will issue tickets for every
$10 of your purchases.
4. Grand prize winning ticket number published in the
December 18 edition of The Anderson County Review.
Grand prize must be claimed by 5 p.m. Monday, Dec. 22.
5. Weekly winning ticket numbers will be hidden within
The Great Christmas Giveaway ad section during the
Nov. 20, Nov. 27, Dec. 4, and Dec. 11 issues of the Review.
Some gifts
only give once…
Weekly winning ticket numbers must be claimed by 5
p.m. the following Tuesday.
6. All prize monies are issued in certificates redeemable
only at The Great Christmas Giveaway participating
merchants.
7. Any unclaimed prizes as of 5 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 16, will
be awarded to the Grand Prize winner.
8. Must be 14 or over to play. Business owners, employees and their families are eligible to play, but may not
submit receipts from their affiliated business.
Pour a little thanks this season
with the perfect bottle of wine.
33410-388
…but a gift
subscription to
the Review gives
for the whole year!
52 print & email editions
$54.45(incl. tax)
county & adjoining counties
$64.43 elsewhere
Subscribe by phone
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
104 S. Maple St, Garnett, KS
785-433-3950
Follow us on socials!
Thanksgiving pies,
fresh-baked rolls!
Order by noon Monday, Nov. 24
Call (913) 898-6211
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
Save your receipts
and merchantissued GCG coupons
from these merchants
today and earn your
tickets. The more you
spend, the more tickets you earn. Watch
these ads each week
for your ticket numbers and win instant
weekly $50 prizes!
9
GCG
Sponsors of the
Great Christmas Giveaway!
1-Stop – Parker
7th Street Grocery
ACE Hardware- Garnett
AuBurn PharmacyGarnett
Baumans Carpet &
Furniture
Cedar Valley Tire
Garnett Publishing, Inc
GSSB
Midwest Sales &
Surplus
Mont Ida Meats
Neosho Memorial
Pizza Hut
Trade Winds
Waters Hardware Garnett
Woodys Liquor
What
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.
cant you find at…
Midwest
Sales & Surplus… ?
FaLL MEAT
BUNDLE SPECIAL!
2 beef roasts, 3-4 lb
M
10 lb hamburger GaRkEeAsTa
Christma
s
2 pkgs steaks
Gift!
5 lb pork sausage
2 pkgs pork chops
$250.00 plus tax
Locally-raised and processed in Anderson County, Ks.
While supplies last.
*Now booking processing appointments for 2026
In observance of the
Thanksgiving Holiday, we will not be open
for business Thursday, November 27.
We will close at noon Friday, and
no branch locations will be open Saturday.
All locations
will reopen
Monday morning
to serve you!
060009
Stuff your stocking
with Trade Winds
gift certificates.
110 W. 5th Garnett
(785) 448-5856
Remote Control
Cars
Pet Toys &
Supplies
Power
Tools
Space
Heaters
Holiday
Gift Wrap
Wireless
Speakers
Toilet
Paper
Kids Toys &
Stocking Stuffers
NEW INVENTORY DAILY! COME & BROWSE!
22820 NW 1700 Road Garnett, Ks.
Hours: Mon-Fri: 8 a.m.5 p.m. Sat: 8 a.m.4 p.m.
Empowering womens health
at every stage of life
Our Services Include:
Your health
journey matters
from your first
gynecological
exam, through
pregnancy, into
menopause and
beyond.
Our compassionate, experienced
team offers
personalized care
tailored to you.
Maternity care.
Preventive well-woman exams.
Family planning and contraception
counseling.
Detecting and treating breast
problems.
Digital and 3D Mammography.
Gynecological surgery, including hys
terectomy, bladder repair and vaginal
reconstruction.
Laparoscopic hysterectomy.
Minimally invasive surgery
(laproscopic surgery).
Treatment of ovarian cysts.
Treatment of endometriosis.
Contraception care.
Infertility counseling.
Menopause care, including hormone
replacement therapy.
Treatment of osteoporosis.
Cosmetic services.
629 S. Plummer Ave.,
WOMENS HEALTH CENTER Chanute, KS 620.431.4000
Get Your Vehicle
Ready For Winter!
(785) 448-3212
The only number you need
for the Best Service!
Order your
party trays early!
Oil Changes, Brake Jobs,
Front End Alignments,
Automotive Batteries,
Tire Sales & Repairs.
Mon.-Fr. 8-5:30 Sat. 8-4 Closed Sun.
22800 NW 1700 Rd Garnett (785) 204-1961
601 South Oak Garnett, Kansas (785) 448-3212
Perfect for your home or office event.
Well help you plan quantities & selections.
10
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Notice
Notice of resolution for Lone Elm
property holder – 203 LE Elm
Your RIGHT to know, guaranteed by Kansas Law.
Notice of sale – 27429 N Hwy 59 Notice of resolution for Lone Elm
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 6, 2025.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Lakeview Loan Servicing, LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Samuel T. Stuteville; Donna L. Stuteville;
John Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Mary Doe
(Tenant/Occupant)
Defendants.
Case No. AN-2025-CV-000021
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District
Court of Anderson County, Kansas, the
undersigned Sheriff of Anderson County,
Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for
cash in hand, at the West Door of the
Courthouse at Garnett Anderson County,
Kansas, on December 4, 2025, at 10:00
AM, the following real estate:
Beginning at a point 417 feet South of
the Northeast corner of the Southeast
Quarter (SE/4) of Section Twenty-four
(24), Township Twenty (20) South, Range
Nineteen (19) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, thence West 250 feet, thence
South 200 feet, thence East 250 feet,
thence North 200 feet to the point of
beginning, commonly known as 27429
N Highway 59, Garnett, KS 66032 (the
Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made
without appraisement and subject to the
redemption period as provided by law,
and further subject to the approval of the
Court. For more information, visit www.
Southlaw.com
Wesley McClain, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Prepared By:
SouthLaw, P.C.
Linda Tarpley (KS #22357)
13160 Foster,, Suite 100
Overland Park, KS 66213-2660
(913) 663-7600
(913) 663-7899 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(252560)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
STATE OF KANSAS,
Plaintiff,
vs.
2003 CHEVROLET TRAILBLZAER
VIN: 1GNDT13SX32354927
Defendant.
Case #AN-2025-CV-000009
NOTICE OF PENDING FORFEITURE
(Pursuant to the Kansas Standard
Asset Seizure and Forfeiture Act; K.S.A.
60-4101 et seq.)
To Whom It May Concern:
TAKE NOTICE HEREOF that the property described in the caption has been
seized for forfeiture and is pending forfeiture to the State of Kansas, pursuant
to the Kansas Standard Asset Seizure
and Forfeiture Act (K.S.A. 60-4101, et
seq., the 11Act11 ) If you have not previously received a Notice of Seizure for
Forfeiture, this is notice pursuant to the
Act. The property, described in the caption, was seized in Anderson County,
Kansas, on or about the 2 day of January,
2025, pursuant to a lawful traffic stop
during which stop methamphetamine was
found within said conveyance. The substance was seized and the conveyance
seized since it was facilitating the transportation of said contraband. Possession
of methamphetamine, a controlled substance, is illegal and constitutes a felony, pursuant K.S.A. 21-5705 and K.S.A.
21-5716.
TAKE FURTHER NOTICE that you may
do any of the following:
(1) File a verified claim for Request for
Recognition of Exemption and send a
copy thereof by certified mail to the
Seizing Law Enforcement Agency; or,
(2) File a verified petition with the District
Court, Plaintiff's attorney and the Seizing
Law Enforcement Agency; or,
nv6t3*
NOTICE OF WORKSHOP
PLANNING COMMISSION
Notice is hereby given that City of Garnett
Planning Commission will be holding a
workshop.
Discussion: Comprehensive Plan
A RESOLUTION FIXING A TIME AND
PLACE FOR PROVIDING FOR A
NOTICE OF A HEARING BEFORE THE
GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF
LONE ELM, KANSAS; AT WHICH TIME
THE OWNERS, THEIR AGENTS, OR
LIENHOLDERS OF RECORD OF THE
PROPERTY HERINAFTER DESCRIBED,
MAY APPEAR AND SHOW CAUSE WHY
CERTAIN STRUCTURES SHOULD NOT
BE CONDEMNED AND ORDERED
REPAIR OR DEMOLISHED AS
DANGEROUS AND UNFIT STRUCTURE
PURSUANT TO AND UNDER THE
AUTHORITY OF NO. 43, SECTION I
OF LONE ELM CITY ORDINANCE AND
K.S.A. 12-1750 ET SEQ, AS AMENDED.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED
BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS:
That a hearing will be held on the 30th
day of December 2025 at 7:00 p.m. in
the Lone Elm Community Building, Lone
Elm, Kansas, at which time the owner, his
or her agent, any lienholders of record,
and any other parties in interest of the
structures and may appear and show
cause why such structure should not
be condemned as an unsafe or dangerous structure and ordered repaired or
demolished.
Description of property and last known
contact person:
301 LE Elm, Kincaid, Ks 66039; Block 2,
Lots 11 and 12 (Dale Ott, 3213 E. 10th St,
Kansas City, MO 64127)
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the
City Clerk shall cause this Resolution to
be published and shall give notice of the
aforesaid hearing in the manner provided
by law..
PASSED AND ADOPTED by the governing body of the Lone Elm City Council,
Lone Elm, Kansas, on the 12th day of
November, 2025.
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS
/s/Gerald Morrison, Mayor
ATTEST:
/s/Eileen Johns, City Clerk
nv20t2*
Notice of resolution for Lone
The law also provides for the provisional Elm property holder – 201
return of certain property, under certain
circumstances with the posting of a surety bond or following a court hearing on
whether probable cause existed when
the property was seized. You may wish
to consult with your own attorney before
deciding what is best for However, if no
petition or claim is filed within 30 days
of the mailing, the publication or other
service of this notice, your interest in
the property described in the caption will
be forfeited. All such requests, petitions
and claims shall comply strictly with the
requirements set out in K.S.A. 60-4011.
Be aware that (1) it is a crime to verify
falsely an ownership interest or other
information in any request, petition or
claim; and (2) Any claimant who fails
to establish that a substantial portion
of claimant's interest is exempt from
forfeiture may be responsible to pay the
reasonable costs, expenses and attorney's fees of other claimants and of the
State of Kansas.
Copies/documents for District Court
should be mailed to: Clerk of Anderson
County District Court, 101 E. 4th Ave.,
Garnett, KS 66032
Copies/documents for Law Enforcement
(Seizing) Agency should be mailed to:
Lt./Det. Todd Turner, 131 W. 5th Ave.,
Garnett, KS 66032
Copies/documents for Plaintiff's Attorney
should be mailed to: Steven R. Wilson,
County Attorney, Courthouse, 100 E. 4th
Ave., Garnett, KS 66032
Online forms of KS Judicial Council may
be helpful, found at https://www.kjc.
ks.gov/legal-forms/civil-asset-forfeiture
Issued this 14 day of November, 2025.
STEVEN R. WILSON,
Anderson Co. Atty Courthouse,
100 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett, KS 66032
nv20t1*
Thursday, Dec 4, 2025 at 6:00 p.m.
City Commissioners Room
131 West 5th Avenue,
Garnett, Kansas, 66032
at which time the City of Garnett Planning
Commission will be discussing a new
Comprehensive Plan.
City of Garnett Planning Commission
nv20t1*
Current statewide Public Notice
archive available at
www.kansaspublicnotices.com
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
RESOLUTION NO. 2025-003
A RESOLUTION FIXING A TIME AND
PLACE FOR PROVIDING FOR A
NOTICE OF A HEARING BEFORE THE
GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF
LONE ELM, KANSAS; AT WHICH TIME
THE OWNERS, THEIR AGENTS, OR
LIENHOLDERS OF RECORD OF THE
PROPERTY HERINAFTER DESCRIBED,
MAY APPEAR AND SHOW CAUSE WHY
CERTAIN STRUCTURES SHOULD NOT
BE CONDEMNED AND ORDERED
REPAIR OR DEMOLISHED AS
DANGEROUS AND UNFIT STRUCTURE
PURSUANT TO AND UNDER THE
AUTHORITY OF NO. 43, SECTION I
OF LONE ELM CITY ORDINANCE AND
K.S.A. 12-1750 ET SEQ, AS AMENDED.
WHEREAS, the enforcing officer of
the City of Lone Elm, Kansas did on
November 5, 2025, file with the governing
body of the said city, a statement in writing
that the structure or structures hereinafter
described, are dangerous and unfit for
human habitation.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED
BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS:
That a hearing will be held on the 30th
day of December 2025 at 7:00 p.m. in the
Lone Elm Community Building, Lone Elm,
Kansas, at which time the owner, his or
her agent, any lienholders of record, and
any other parties in interest of the structures and may appear and show cause
why such structure should not be condemned as an unsafe or dangerous structure and ordered repaired or demolished.
Description of property and last known
contact person:
201, Kincaid, Ks 66039; Block 3, Lots 7
and 8 (Ivan Jr. & Rhonda Rae Hunt, 1302
S. Twyman, Ottawa, Ks 66067)
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the
City Clerk shall cause this Resolution to
be published and shall give notice of the
aforesaid hearing in the manner provided
by law..
PASSED AND ADOPTED by the governing body of the Lone Elm City Council,
Lone Elm, Kansas, on the 12th day of
November, 2025.
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS
/s/Gerald Morrison, Mayor
ATTEST:
/s/Eileen Johns, City Clerk
Notice of Public Hearing
The City of Westphalia, Kansas will hold
a public hearing for the consideration of
nv20t2*
adopting the Neighborhood Revitalization
Plan for the City of Westphalia, KS. The
hearing will be held on Tuesday, the 9th
day of December, 2025 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Westphalia City Hall.
nv20t1*
Notice of application for a variance
(Published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON
APPLICATION FOR A VARIANCE
Notice is hereby given that an application
has been filed with the City of Garnett
Board of Zoning Appeals for a variance
described as follows:
Case #: V 25-03
Applicant: Jeffery McCain
Purpose of Variance: Variance on
Accessory Building
Legal Discription: Garnett, S25, T20, R19,
BEG 1500'W & 562'N SE COR NE4,
W188',S97.5',E188',N97.5'TO POB
RESOLUTION NO. 2025-002
A RESOLUTION FIXING A TIME AND
PLACE FOR PROVIDING FOR A
NOTICE OF A HEARING BEFORE THE
GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF
LONE ELM, KANSAS; AT WHICH TIME
THE OWNERS, THEIR AGENTS, OR
LIENHOLDERS OF RECORD OF THE
PROPERTY HERINAFTER DESCRIBED,
MAY APPEAR AND SHOW CAUSE WHY
CERTAIN STRUCTURES SHOULD NOT
BE CONDEMNED AND ORDERED
REPAIR OR DEMOLISHED AS
DANGEROUS AND UNFIT STRUCTURE
PURSUANT TO AND UNDER THE
AUTHORITY OF NO. 43, SECTION I
OF LONE ELM CITY ORDINANCE AND
K.S.A. 12-1750 ET SEQ, AS AMENDED.
WHEREAS, the enforcing officer of
the City of Lone Elm, Kansas did on
November 5, 2025, file with the governing
body of the said city, a statement in writing
that the structure or structures hereinafter
described, are dangerous and unfit for
human habitation.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED
BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS:
That a hearing will be held on the 30th
day of December 2025 at 7:00 p.m. in
the Lone Elm Community Building, Lone
Elm, Kansas, at which time the owner, his
or her agent, any lienholders of record,
and any other parties in interest of the
structures and may appear and show
cause why such structure should not
be condemned as an unsafe or dangerous structure and ordered repaired or
demolished.
Description of property and last known
contact person:
203 LE Elm, Kincaid, Ks 66039; Block
3, Lots 5 and 6 (Thomas M Amyx, 5200
Brown Ln, Lawrence, Ks 66049)
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the
City Clerk shall cause this Resolution to
be published and shall give notice of the
aforesaid hearing in the manner provided
by law..
PASSED AND ADOPTED by the governing body of the Lone Elm City Council,
Lone Elm, Kansas, on the 12th day of
November, 2025.
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS
/s/Gerald Morrison, Mayor
ATTEST:
/s/Eileen Johns, City Clerk
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(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
RESOLUTION NO. 2025-003
A RESOLUTION FIXING A TIME AND
PLACE FOR PROVIDING FOR A
NOTICE OF A HEARING BEFORE THE
GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF
LONE ELM, KANSAS; AT WHICH TIME
THE OWNERS, THEIR AGENTS, OR
LIENHOLDERS OF RECORD OF THE
PROPERTY HERINAFTER DESCRIBED,
MAY APPEAR AND SHOW CAUSE WHY
CERTAIN STRUCTURES SHOULD NOT
BE CONDEMNED AND ORDERED
REPAIR OR DEMOLISHED AS
DANGEROUS AND UNFIT STRUCTURE
PURSUANT TO AND UNDER THE
AUTHORITY OF NO. 43, SECTION I
OF LONE ELM CITY ORDINANCE AND
K.S.A. 12-1750 ET SEQ, AS AMENDED.
WHEREAS, the enforcing officer of
the City of Lone Elm, Kansas did on
November 5, 2025, file with the governing
body of the said city, a statement in writing
that the structure or structures hereinafter
described, are dangerous and unfit for
human habitation.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED
BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS:
That a hearing will be held on the 30th
day of December 2025 at 7:00 p.m. in
the Lone Elm Community Building, Lone
Elm, Kansas, at which time the owner, his
or her agent, any lienholders of record,
and any other parties in interest of the
structures and may appear and show
cause why such structure should not
be condemned as an unsafe or dangerous structure and ordered repaired or
demolished.
Description of property and last known
contact person:
304 LE Second, Kincaid, KS 66039; Block
10, Lots 16, 17, and 18 (Rebecca Rendell,
3907 NW 94th St., Topeka, Ks 66618
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the
City Clerk shall cause this Resolution to
be published and shall give notice of the
aforesaid hearing in the manner provided
by law..
PASSED AND ADOPTED by the governing body of the Lone Elm City Council,
Lone Elm, Kansas, on the 12th day of
November, 2025.
CITY OF LONE ELM, KANSAS
/s/Gerald Morrison, Mayor
ATTEST:
/s/Eileen Johns, City Clerk
nv20t2*
Notice of summary of ordinance establishing
utility charges delinquency date for Garnett
Notice of hearing for consideration of
adopting revitalization plan in Westphalia
(Published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
Notice of resolution for Lone Elm
property holder – 304 LE Second
(3) Do nothing.
Notice of workshop planning commission
(Published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
RESOLUTION NO. 2025-001
WHEREAS, the enforcing officer of
the City of Lone Elm, Kansas did on
November 5, 2025, file with the governing
body of the said city, a statement in writing
that the structure or structures hereinafter
described, are dangerous and unfit for
human habitation.
Notice of pending forfeiture
(Published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
property holder – 301 LE Elm
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
A public hearing before the City of Garnett
Board of Zoning Appeals will be held
regarding said application for a Variance:
Tuesday, Dec 16, 2025 at 6:00 p.m.
City Commissioners Room
131 West 5th Avenue,
Garnett, Kansas, 66032
at which time written and oral comments
will be considered by the City of Garnett
Board of Zoning Appeals Information
regarding said application may be
reviewed prior to the meeting at the office
of the City of Garnett Planning Director,
131 W. 5th Ave., Garnett Ks., 66032
City of Garnett Board of Zoning Appeals
nv20t1*
(Published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
CITY ATTORNEYS SUMMARY OF
ORDINANCE #4283
On November 10, 2025, the governing body of the city of Garnett Kansas,
passed Ordinance #4283 amending
Article 7, Section 15-709 of the Municipal
code (2023 Ed.) establishing a delinquency date for the payment of utility charges;
and repealing existing section and provi-
HAYNES…
FROM PAGE 4
vice mayor. What they put
Ruth and Ronald through
is inexcusable.
Cody, who allegedly
left his previous job as a
captain with the Kansas
City, Missouri, police
department just ahead of
an investigation, was suspended and later resigned
after it came out that he
had tried to cover up messages he exchanged with
Kari Newell, a Marion
restaurant owner who was
the alleged victim in the
case police were working.
The
ex-chief
was
charged this fall with
interfering with judicial
sions of Ordinance #4280.
A complete copy of this ordinance is available free of charge at www.garnettks.net
(available for at least one week following
the publication of this summary notice) or
at City Hall, 131 W. Fifth Avenue, during
regular business hours.
This summary is certified by Terry J.
Solander, City Attorney, in compliance
with K.S.A. 12-3007.
nv20t1*
process. Last seen, he
reportedly had become a
mail carrier in a western
state, but he faces a state
court trial in Kansas on
Feb. 2.
At this point, no one
expects the city to give in
for its part in the case.
Everybody involved
in this is 100 percent convinced we are going to
go to trial with the city,
Meyer told the Kansas
Recorder. This will
make that easier in some
regard.
Veteran Kansas editorialist Steve Haynes sends
his column, Along the
Sappa, from his perch
in Oberlin, on the banks
of that often-dry western
Kansas creek.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
11
CLASSIFIEDS
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Real Estate Classifieds!
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Garnett, KS 66032
REAL ESTATE
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold
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View all local properties for sale at our website:
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HELP WANTED
Part-time weekend cook
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May turn into full-time
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oc23t8*
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8 a.m.- 8 p.m.
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nv20t1*
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HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Dawn
McCarty working at Studio
501. Taking walk-ins and
appointments. Contact her
at (913) 244-7358. nv20t3*
Happiness is…Donating a
new unwrapped toy to Toys
for Tots. Donations may
be dropped in our collection boxes at the Anderson
County Review office, 112
West 6th, Garnett. Now
through Tuesday, November
25th.
oc16t6*
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the Reviews EagleEye
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for your wedding, special
event, property survey,
promotional video, high-altitude equipment or building inspection, etc. Realtime view from up to 400
feet elevation, up to nearly
1 mile range. Contact the
Anderson County Review
at (785) 448-3121 for more
info.
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WANT TO VOLUNTEER?
The Governing Body of the City of Garnett invites
interested persons who wish to fill a board vacancy,
or who would like to be considered for the next term
of any advisory board or volunteer position, vacant
or not, to please submit their name and statement of
interest to Garnett City Hall for consideration. Statement of Interest forms can be found on our website
www.simplygarnett.com or can be picked up at City
Hall. As always, if you have any
questions, feel free to call City
Hall at (785) 448-5496
or email info@garnettks.net.
Max Worthington
Garnett, Ks
(785) 448-8936
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Edgecomb Builders
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General Contractor
Notice of sale – 327 W. 9th Ave.
edgecomb Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Public Notice
Ordinance levying 1% sales tax beginning April 2026
(Published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 20, 2025.)
BODY OF THE CITY OF GARNETT,
KANSAS:
ORDINANCE NO. 4284
SECTION 1: A majority of the electors
voting thereon having approved a special
question submitted at the general election
held on the 4th day of November, 2025,
the levying of a retailers' sales tax in
the City of Garnett, for the_pu;poses of
swimming pool and other park improvements, wastewater management and
other infrastructure throughout the city,
as authorized by K.S.A. 12-187 et seq.,
as amended, there is hereby levied a city
retailers' sales tax in the amount of one
percent (1.0%) to take effect on the 1st
day of April, 2026.
AN ORDINANCE LEVYING A CITY
RETAILERS' SALES TAX IN THE
AMOUNT OF ONE PERCENT (1.0%)
WITHIN THE CITY OF GARNETT, FOR
THE PURPOSES OF SWIMMING POOL
AND OTHER PARK IMPROVEMENTS,
WASTEWATER
MANAGEMENT
AND OTHER INFRASTRUCTURE
THROUGHOUT THE CITY; SAID LEVY
TO BE IN ADDITION TO EXISTING CITYWIDE RETAIL SALES TAX.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING
SECTION 2: The 1% city retailers' sales
tax mentioned in 2026. Section 1 above
is in addition to the one-half percent
(0.5%) city retailers' sales tax authorized
by Ordinance #3303, passed on or about
November 10, 1998, which shall continue
to be levied and assessed.
SECTION 3: Except as may otherwise
be provided by law, such tax shall be
identical in its application and exemptions
therefrom to the Kansas Retailers' Sales
Tax Act and all laws and administrative rules and regulations of the Kansas
Department of Revenue relating to the
state retailers sales tax shall apply to such
city retailers' sales tax insofar as such
laws and regulations may be made appli-
cable. The services of the Department of
Revenue shall be utilized to administer,
enforce and collect such tax.
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 6, 2025.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Lakeview Loan Servicing, LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Braden Rigdon a/k/a Braden William
Rigdon; Cheyenne Rigdon a/k/a
Cheyenne Elizabeth Nipko; Unknown
Spouse, if any, of Braden Rigdon a/k/a
Braden William Rigdon; John Doe
(Tenant/Occupant); Mary Doe (Tenant/
Occupant)
Defendants.
SECTION 4: This ordinance shall be published in an official city newspaper, and a
copy duly certified shall be submitted to
the State Director of Taxation. PASSED
this 10th day of November, 2025.
Case No. AN-2025-CV-000025
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
/s/Mark Locke
Mayor
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District
Court of Anderson County, Kansas, the
undersigned Sheriff of Anderson County,
Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction
and sell to the highest bidder for cash in
hand, at the West Door of the Courthouse
ATTEST:
Patricia Brewer
City Clerk
NOTICE OF SALE
at Garnett Anderson County, Kansas, on
December 4, 2025, at 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
The East 33 feet of Lot Fifteen (15)
and the West 2 feet of Lot Sixteen (16)
along with the vacated alley between
Lots Fifteen (15) and Sixteen (16) In
Block Seven (7) in Chapmans Addition
to the City of Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, commonly known as 327 W 9th
Ave, Garnett, KS 66032 (the Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made
without appraisement and subject to the
redemption period as provided by law,
and further subject to the approval of the
Court. For more information, visit www.
Southlaw.com
Wesley McClain, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Prepared By:
SouthLaw, P.C.
Blair T. Gisi (KS #24096)
13160 Foster,, Suite 100
Overland Park, KS 66213-2660
(913) 663-7600
(913) 663-7899 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
12
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 20, 2025
GACC 55th Annual
Sponsored and organized by the Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce
November 29th @ 6:30 p.m.
Garnett Town Square
Commemorate
1×4 Americas 250th
ACR Garnett style!
LIMITED EDITION ORNAMENT
Enjoy the evening in
Americas 250th anniversary will only come once,
and Garnetts upcoming
celebration will be just as
memorable.
HISTORIC
DOWNTOWN
GARNETT
Thanks to the Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce and
parade participants for
continuing this wonderful
Christmas tradition.
$2495
*FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS
OF 4 OR MORE
Give a gift this Christmas
reflecting this oncein-a lifetime occasion
a beautiful 3D finish,
polished pewter ornament
containing Garnetts official
America 250 celebration
seal.
Available from the
Anderson County Review
first-come, first served,
while quantities last.
Available only while quantities last at Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Order by phone (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
Have fun at the
Garnett Christmas Parade
and always shop our
local businesses first.
Memory Lane
Christmas Tree Farm
2×5
Memory
Lane
Celebrating
27 years
making memories!
Christmas Tree Farm
Friday, Nov. 28 10-5
Saturday, Nov 29 10-5
Sunday Nov. 30 12-5
(limited supply of choose & cut)
Drive-thru
Light Display
Thanksgiving
Nov. 27 5:30-9
Nov. 28, 29, 30 5:30-9
2×2
GSSB
MEMBER FDIC
Kick off this years Christmas magic and support
local merchants at Saturdays GACC Christmas Parade!
Come enjoy the beauty of the
Garnett Christmas Parade.
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Make it a family tradition and
Burns
Dental
Always support
our local businesses.
Burns Dental Lab
Enjoy the magic of the Christmas Parade
and support our area businesses
2×3
by shopping local this holiday season!
EKAE
Ethanol – Fueling A New Generation
Don and Siobhan White
105 W. 4th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-5543
Come enjoy the
Christmas Parade and
Shop Local for
Small Business Saturday!
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State Bank
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Courtney Tucker, Agent
courtney.tucker@agencywestins.com
www.fsbkansas.com
415 S. Oak St. Garnett (785) 448-2284
Courtney Tucker, agent
We
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From Garnett:
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8 miles to Vermont Rd., then 2 miles north of Rantoul.
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