Anderson County Review — November 21, 2024
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from November 21, 2024. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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November 21, 2024
SINCE 1865 158th Year, No. 44
www.garnett-ks.com | (785) 448-3121 | review@garnett-ks.com
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Local assault allegation might play into Trump deportation plan
President-elect pledges to
use military for deportation
round-up, start with criminals
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT An illegal immigrant
charged in the assault of an Ottawa
woman last month on the Prairie
Spirit trail is due in Anderson County
District Court next week, as president-elect Donald Trumps pledge to
use the U.S. Military to begin mass
deportations of illegals beginning
with criminals takes center state in
the national conversation.
Porfirio De La Cruz-Cantu is currently being held in the Anderson
County Jail in lieu of $150,000 bond
in connection with the attack that
occurred October 10th in which a
female Ottawa bicyclist told law officers he knocked her from her bicycle as she passed him on the trail
near Scipio and attempted to rape her,
stuffing leaves in her mouth as she
struggled on the ground screaming
for help. The woman said she was able
to fight De La Cruz off and escape to
a nearby residence. De La Cruz was
apprehended a short time later riding
his bicycle on U.S. 59
Highway after officers sent his photo
to other officers
tending the victim.
The
incident
brings a local focus
to national headlines and the publics demand leading
Cruz-Cantu
up to the recent presidential election that
federal action be taken to curtail a
Biden Administration surge in illegal
immigration into the U.S., following
Trump-era border policies rescinded
on President Bidens first day in office
that critics say resulted in as many as
8 million illegals entering the country
since 2021.
Details about when De La CruzCantu entered the country and the
circumstances of his arrival have not
come to light so far, though his wife
told authorities they were Mexican
citizens and were in the country illegally. The two worked at a Garnett
Mexican restaurant located on North
Maple Street.
Though theres conflicting research
on whether illegal immigrants com-
mit crimes at a higher rate thannative-born populations, most studies
dont include data of the most recent
illegal immigration surge since 2021.
What is known is that high-profile
incidents like the murder of Georgia
college student Lakin Riley and the
Tuesday conviction of Jose Ibarra in
that case, as well as the alleged takeover of Colorado apartment complexes by immigrant gangs has brought
the issue to the forefront of American
discourse.
A Republican-led report from the
SEE ASSAULT ON PAGE 5
LGGPR ramrod named
parade Grand Marshall
Nighttime parade will circle
Garnett Square ushering in
the season 6:30 p.m. Nov. 30
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Lake Garnett Grand
Prix Revival stalwart Tracy Modlin
was selected as Grand Marshall of the
54th Annual Garnett Area Chamber of
Commerce Christmas Parade Nov. 30 as
Toy Trains and Candy Canes, hits the
downtown thoroughfares with lighted
splendor for the nighttime event.
Modlin has been an integral fixture
of the annual sports car revival, based
on the 1960s-70s Lake Garnett Grand
Prix races, working behind the scenes
with vintage sports car enthusiasts and
other high performance motor fans to
turn the auto and track exhibition into
one of the areas most popular events.
The Lake Garnett Park Road where the
driving exhibition is held underwent a
major asphalt overlay in time for the
October 2024 event.
The
nighttime
parade arrives in
downtown Garnett
at 6:30 p.m. Judged
floats should line up
at Ray Meyer Gym at
5:15 p.m. with judging
beginning at 5:30 p.m.
Non-judged
floats
Modlin
line up at the gym at
5:45 p.m. and entries
will move out at 6:15 p.m. Float awards
are made in Chamber Bucks negotiable at any GACC merchant member,
$100, $50 and $25 for first through third
prizes. Entries will be judged by ranSEE PARADE ON PAGE 9
Richmond man waives preliminary
hearing, arraignment set Dec. 23
BY DANE HICKS
Last Friday nights Beaver Moon emerges over a treeline
in Monroe Township. It was the last supermoon of the
calendar year, when the moon appears bigger and brighter because its on its closest approach to the Earth. The
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-21-2024 / BARB HICKS
last event of the year is called a Beaver Moon because
November is when beavers prepare for winter by strengthening their dams and storing more food.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
OTTAWA A Richmond man awaits
arraignment on first degree murder
and child abuse charges Christmas
week in connection with the death of
his infant son last
February.
Jason
Marnell,
25 of Richmond,
waived his preliminary hearing Nov. 12
in Franklin County
District Court and is
set for arraignment
on the charges Dec.
Marnell
23.
Marnell
was
arrested February 14 on charges that
injuries he inflicted due to the abuse
of his infant son, Waylon S. Marnell, in
a January 14 incident resulted in the
boys death two weeks later.
Franklin County Sheriff's deputies
responded to a medical call on January
14th at a Richmond residence and upon
arrival found the infant unresponsive.
Life-saving measures were attempted
and the baby was transported to an
Ottawa Hospital and later transferred
to Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas
City in critical condition. KBI officers
were asked to assist in the investigation on January 17th. The baby was
born December 13, 2023.
In a January 16th Facebook post,
the child's mother, Marie Leitner,
recounted to friends that Waylon had
choked on milk when she was away and
aspirated into his lung, at which time
Marnell allegedly started CPR before a
deputy took over the process upon his
arrival. Leitner said she then arrived at
the home but the child had apparently
been some 20 minutes without oxygen
to the brain.
Defendants can waive their preliminary hearing, which is an initial court
review of evidence and testimony to
determine whether enough evidence
exists to justify formal arraignment,
for any number of reasons. Preliminary
SEE MARNELL ON PAGE 8
Fake pastor could get 40 years for sex crime
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A former Kincaid
man may face some 40 years
in prison as a repeat sexual offender after a convinction handed down this week
in Anderson County District
Court.
Anderson County Attorney
Elizabeth Oliver said in a
statement she anticipated
Kevin LaBelle could be sentenced for as much as four
decades when his sentencing
is concluded January 13.
Oliver charged LaBelle in
February with a number of
offenses including felony sodomy with a 14 year-old boy.
LaBelle portrayed himself on
social media as the head of a
prison ministry from
his location
in Kincaid,
although
K a n s a s
C i t y s
Christian
B i b l e
College and
LaBelle
Seminary,
where
he
took instruction, said he
never completed his degree
program.
LaBelle was adjudicated as
a juvenile in 1988 for indecent
liberties with a child and had
a subsequent conviction as
an adult in 2017 which landed
him on the Kansas sex offender registry. He won a partial
appeal of his sentence in 2010
after arguing court officials
included his juvenile adjudication when considering
extending his sentence on the
2017 case.
Oliver commended the work
of Anderson County Sheriffs
Office Dectective Bob Ward
along with other members of
the department who assisted
in the investigation, as well as
the courage of the victim for
his testimony in the case.
LaBelle will be sentenced
on January 13, 2025.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-21-2024 / ACHS Photo
The classic board game Clue came to life on the ACHS auditorium stage last weekend courtesy of the ACHS
drama and music departments for the schools annual musical. Above from left, Khloe McCarty/Mrs Peacock, Jack
Dykes/Colonel Mustard, MaKenna Goetz/Miss Scarlet, Owen Thompson /Mr. Boddy, Zach Schaffer/Mr. Green,
Brodie Wiesner/Professor Plum, and Kris Holloway as Mrs White. Not pictured: Danika Metcalfe as the detective.
2
NEWS IN
BRIEF
EARLY NEWSPAPER
DEADLINE
The Nov. 28 Anderson County
Review will be distributed
Wednesday, Nov. 27. Deadlines
for that edition will be Friday,
November 22.
YOURE GONNA MISS US
The Anderson County Review
will have early deadlines and
our offices will be closed
Thursday, Nov. 28 and Friday,
Nov 29 for Thanksgiving.
Advertising and news deadlines will be 5 p.m. Friday Nov.
22. You wont remember this, so
call us at (785) 448-3121.
SENIOR CENTER
THANKSGIVING DINNER
Youre invited to a community Thanksgiving dinner hosted
by the Garnett Senior Center
on November 28th at 12 p.m.
Turkey, mashed potatoes,
dressing, gravy and beverages
provided. Please bring a side
dish or dessert. Everyone is
welcome.
AMERICAN LEGION BINGO
Bingo at American Legion Post
48 Garnett will be held every
Tuesday, starting time at 6:30
p.m.
NOVEMBER HARVESTERS
Harvesters for November
will be the Monday before
Thanksgiving on November
25th at 2 p.m., at the Quonset
Hut.
HOLIDAY PARADE
The Garnett Chamber of
Commerces 54th annual
Christmas parade and lighting
ceremony will be on November
30th at 6:30 p.m. at the downtown square.
GRIEF WORKSHOP NOV. 23
The Garnett Church of the
Nazarene will host a 3 hour
seminar on Saturday, Nov. 23,
on coping with grief from the
loss of someone during the holidays. The seminar runs 9 a.m.12 noon at the church at 258 W.
Park Road in Garnett. For more
information call (785) 448-3208
or go online to griefshare.org/
holidays.
MOTHER OF ABORTION
HIGHLIGHTED IN OTTAWA
SCREENING
Ottawa Bible Church will host
a screening of The 1916
Project, a documentary film
on the rise of the abortion culture and Planned Parenthood,
at 5 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 24, at
Ottawa Municipal Auditorium.
The film is based the book by
Seth Gruber and chronicles the
Mother of Abortion Margaret
Sanger, who mainstreamed the
political and cultural acceptance of abortion in the U.S.A
question and answer session
by OBC Pastor Smith and prolife activist and author Seth
Gruber will follow the screening.
BPW HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE
On December 1st the Garnett
BPW is holding the Holiday
Boutique at the Senior Center
from Noon to 4:00pm. Start your
Christmas shopping at the many
booths from Pampered Chef,
Tastefully Simple, Christian
Crafters, Major Popcorn,
Homemade Jams, Jellies by
Kris, Painted bricks, jewelry by
Rosalee, Guest Homes Estates
and more.
CORNHOLE TOURNAMENTS
Everything Thursday their will
be a cornhole tournament at the
Garnett VFW, 1507 S. Elm St. It
is a family friendly event open to
everyone. Registration begins
at 6 p.m., tournament begins at
6:30 p.m. Entry fee is $15.
UNPLANNED PREGNANCY
Advice & Aid Pregnancy Center
in Overland Park helps women
and their families make an
educated decision about an
unplanned pregnancy by providing evidence-based, medical information about parenting, adoption and abortion. Call
(913) 962-0200 or visit www.
adviceandaid.com.
Dja get
married yet?
Tell us about it. Wedding/
engagement notices are free
review@garnett-ks.com
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
NOVEMBER 12, 2024
Chairman Leslie McGhee called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00
AM on November 12, 2024 at the
Anderson County Commission Room.
Attendance: Leslie McGhee, Present:
David Pracht, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The pledge of
allegiance was recited. Minutes from
the previous meeting were approved
as presented.
Road & Bridge
Ethan Lickteig, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission. He presented the contract from
Schwab-Eaton PA for $47,600 to conduct the engineering for the Local
Bridge Improvement Program bridge.
All Commissioners signed the contract. Discussion was held on county
roads and bridges.
Economic Development
Jessica
Mills,
Economic
Development Director, met with the
commission. She was in contact with
the City of Colony and they would
like to instate the Neighborhood
Revitalization Program. The city and
school district has approved the program but the county needs to vote on
it. Jessica will be in contact with Julie
to get the program on the commission
agenda.
Executive Session
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded
to enter into executive session for
non-elected personnel for 15 minutes.
All voted yes. Commissioners; Ethan
Lickteig, Road & Bridge Supervisor;
and Julie Wettstein, County Clerk
were present. Commissioner Pracht
moved and Commissioner Mersman
seconded to re-enter into open meeting. All voted yes. No action taken.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:10 PM
due to no further business.
ANDERSON COUNTY LAND TRANSFERS
ECS Holdings Incorporated to Muth
Properties LLC: Se4 24-19-18.
Brenda L Osler to Karen See: E2 lot
23 & all lot 24 blk 26 City of Garnett.
Cecil Enterprises LLC to JYGA
Tech USA Inc.: All lot 10 & north
100 lot 14 Maggio Addition to City
of Garnett, less beg at nwcor lot 10
Maggio Addition to City of Garnett,
thence east along north line of said
lot 10 on an assumed bearing of
south 895613 east a distance of
172.59 feet to center of an entrance to
south, thence south 000000 west a
distance of 233.00 feet; thence north
895613 west a distance of 172.59
feet to west line of said lot 10; thence
north 000000 east a distance of
233.00 feet to pob.
JYGA Tech USA Inc. to 26150 NE
Highway 169 Holding LLC: All land
lying south and east of us Hwy 169 of
described tract of land: N2 sw4 sw4
29-20-20, less hwy and also less tract
beg at swcor n2 sw4 sw4 29-20-20,
thence running north 150, thence east
290, thence south 150, thence west
290 to pob; & also all land lying south
and east of us hwy 169 of described
tract of land: beg at swcor nw4 sw4
said section 29-20-20, thence east
19.84 chains, thence north to pt 10.56
feet west and 973 feet south necor
nw4 sw4 said section 29, thence west
1309.44 feet to west line of seciton 29,
thence south to pob; less com at a pt
60 north of pt 48 links east swcor nw4
sw4 section 29, thence running north
170, thence east 20, thence south
30, thence east 20, thence south
140, thence west 40 to pob.
ANDERSON COUNTY TRAFFIC
CASES FILED
Lukas Charles Lahr has been
charged with speeding 70 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Denise Bridget Mallin has been
charged with speeding 77 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Joost Jan Dekooomen has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Jaelyn Snow Leyser has been
charged with failure to yield from private road or driveway.
Shane Robert Evans has been
charged with speeding 83 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Lane A Gibson has been charged
with operating a vehicle without registration or w/expired tag and driving
while license cancelled/suspended/
revoked.
ANDERSON COUNTY CRIMINAL
CASES FILED
Billy Ray Foulke was charged with
two counts of violation of protection
order.
Korine Leslee Hollon was charged
with non-residential burglary, theft and
criminal damage to property.
ANDERSON COUNTY ACCIDENT
REPORTS FILED
On July 27, Tyler Nathan Tush,
Spring Hill, tried to turn around in a cut
hay field, was traveling too fast and
rolled the vehicle.
On October 18, Jama Muhumed
Hassan, Omaha, was traveling south
on Hwy 59 in the area of 1980 Rd
when he struck a deer with his semitruck.
On October 21, Brooklyn Ann
Kellerman, Garnett, was traveling
south on Hwy 31 near Mitchell Rd
when she struck a deer.
On October 26, Devon D Potter,
Abilene, was traveling southbound on
Hwy 59 in the area of Nebraska Rd
when he struck a deer with the front of
the vehicle.
ANDERSON COUNTY ARRESTS FILED
On November 6, Cody Noel
Mundell, Garnett, was arrested for
aggravated domestic battery.
On November 8, Alonso GuzmanSantiz, Urbandale, Iowa, was arrested
for no valid drivers license.
On November 8, Jennifer Leann
McBrearety, Gladestone, Missouri,
was arrested for a probation violation.
On November 8, Billy Ray Foulke,
Garnett, was arrested for stalking and
violation of a protection order.
On November 9, Julio Andre
Casanovavega, Springdale, Arkansas,
was booked as a hold for the Osage
County Sheriffs Office as he was
arrested for distribution of certain illegal drugs.
On November 9, Allen Leroy Bailey,
Topeka, was booked as a hold for the
Osage County Sheriffs Office as he
was arrested for burglary.
On November 9, Edward Cornell
Hunter, Topeka, was booked as a hold
for the Osage County Sheriffs Office
as he was arrested for fleeing or eluding a law enforcement officer.
On November 9, David Justin
McGinn, Wichita, was booked as a
hold for the Osage County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for distribution of certain illegal drugs.
On November 9, Joseph John
Steinke, Melvern, was booked as a
hold for the Osage County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for a probation violation.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
(as of November 13, 2024)
Joseph Wilper was booked into jail
on October 20, 2023.
Chester Casida was booked into jail
on April 5, 2024.
Kevin Labelle was booked into jail
on April 25, 2024.
Joshua Caddell was booked into jail
on May 12, 2024.
Shawn Harris was booked into jail
on May 23, 2024.
Jason Boothe was booked into jail
on June 26, 2024.
Chad Kammerer was booked into
jail on July 5, 2024.
Dawon Paine was booked into jail
on July 12, 2024.
Stuart Wieland was booked into jail
on July 21, 2024.
William Vandenberg was booked
into jail on July 25, 2024.
James Chambers was booked into
jail on August 15, 2024.
Stephen Putthoff was booked ito jail
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-21-2024 / DANE HICKS
ACJSHS students were treated to a break during the school day on Monday courtesy of the music
department and STUCO as 2021 ACHS graduate and now K-State senior Carly Hicks, pictured far left,
brought the student-led acapella group, Resonate, to perform for the students. Next to Hicks from left
are vocalists Trevor Lewis, Beth Land, Maia Bajich, Indigo Belanger, Anna Bajich and Anastasia Meyer.
ACHS grad
named athletic
scholar
EMPORIA, KS – Abigael ReidHarelson of Garnett, is one of 35
student-athletes representing all 15
of Emporia
State's intercollegiate
sports
to
be
named
an
Earl
W.
Sauder Reid-Harelson
Athletic
Scholar for
2023-24. The group was honored
at a luncheon on Nov. 4.
Reid-Harelson, a senior
majoring in Health and Human
Performance, competes in
track for ESU.
For decades, Earl W.
Sauder's commitment to philanthropic giving has aided and
encouraged the students of
Emporia State University. The
scholarship program he established in 2004 with a substantial gift of more than $1 million
has supported hundreds of student-athletes who wear Hornet
black and gold.
After Earl Sauder's death
in 2006, his son, ESU alumnus
Steve Sauder, and Steve's wife,
Bobbi, committed to carry
on the tradition Earl started.
Today, supporting the scholarships Earl started involves
every generation of the Sauder
family.
The Sauder family further
strengthened their financial
commitment to ESU in May
2022 with a legacy gift that
ensures the scholarship will
support Hornet student-athletes for future generations.
More than 450 ESU student-athletes have earned
Sauder scholarships since 2004.
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 8
Recovery Is Easier
Near the Ones
You Love
S H O RT-TE R M I N PATI E NT R E HAB
CLOS E TO H OM E
Patient needs change throughout their recovery.
Thats why Anderson County Hospital offers short-term
skilled nursing care, also called swing bed, which allows
patients to spend added days in a hospital setting where
they can continue to focus on rebuilding strength and
function before returning home.
Get the care you need right here in Garnett. When
you need more time to recover, stay close to home at
Anderson County Hospital.
Learn more
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
saintlukeskc.org/skilled-nursing
Enjoy
your
2×3
Thanksgiving!
Baumans
Baumans will close at 2 p.m.
Wednesday and remain closed for the
day on Thursday.
Well resume our
normal store hours
on Friday, Nov. 29th.
805 N. Maple Garnett (785) 448-3216
M-F 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-4
2×5
Church of the
Nazarene
Put that in the paper!
Call (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
LICKTEIG
JULY 28, 1959 – NOVEMBER 11, 2024
Michael Clair Lickteig, 65,
of Olive Branch, MS went to be
with the Lord
on Veterans
Day, Monday,
November 11,
2024.
M
r
.
Lickteig was
born on July
28, 1959, in
Garnett, KS
Lickteig
as the second
child of six to
Cecil and Dorothy Lickteig.
He is a 1977 graduate of
Garnett High School. He served
our country in the United
States Air Force for 4 years.
After his military service, he
worked for Diebold for 43 years
as a safe and vault specialist.
In his free time, he enjoyed
playing golf, playing with his
grandchildren, and watching
the Kansas City Chiefs play.
Mr. Lickteig was a believer
in Jesus Christ and a member at Compel Church of Olive
Branch.
He was preceded in death
by his brother, Dwayne
Lickteig; and sister-in-law,
Cindy Lickteig. He is survived by his wife of 28 years,
Angela Lickteig; father, Cecil
Lickteig; mother, Dorothy
Feuerborn Lickteig; daughter,
Terri Cunningham (Doug); son,
Michael Lickteig, Jr. (Stacey);
son, Nicholas York (Alicia);
son, Robert Lickteig (Crystal);
son, Adam York; 12 grandchildren: 6 great-grandchildren; brothers: Ken Lickteig
(Marcia) of Chanute, KS, Ron
Lickteig (Karen) of Portland,
OR, Jeff Lickteig (Julie) of
Overland Park, KS, Jerold
Lickteig (Sherri) of Towanda,
KS; sister, Joyce Katzer (John)
of Baldwin City, KS; and many
nieces and nephews.
Services were held at
Compel Church of Olive
Branch, with burial in Autumn
Wood Memorial Park.
PETERSON
JUNE 6, 1959 NOVEMBER 7, 2024
Betsy Jane Peterson (Conde)
passed away on November 7,
2024, at the age of 65.
Private family services will
be held at a later date.
FOLTZ
NOVEMBER 25, 1942 NOVEMBER 17, 2024
Dwyane Foltz, age 81, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Sunday, November 17,
2024, at Parkview Heights in
Garnett, Kansas.
Funeral Mass will be held
at 10:30 a.m. on Monday,
November 25, 2024 at Holy
Angels Catholic Church in
Garnett, Kansas. Inurnment
will follow at Holy Angels
Cemetery in Garnett. Dwyanes
family will greet friends
from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. on
Sunday, November 24, 2024
at Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service in Garnett.
They lost the book of the law!
In 2 Kings chapters 22
and 23 we read the account of
Hilkiah the priest finding the
Book of the Law in the temple
of the LORD and the response
of Josiah the king when it is
presented to him. The Book
of the Law or Book of the
Covenant was a name given
for the code of laws in Exodus
20 and 23 given to Moses at
Mount Sinai immediately after
the Ten Commandments. To
get an idea how important this
book was when Joshua was
assuming leadership after the
death of Moses Gods specific
instructions to him concerning
this book were. Do not let this
Book of the Law depart from
your mouth, meditate on it day
and night, so that you may be
careful to do everything written in it. Such an important
book that had vanished from
the lives of the people. Here
we see Gods hand at work. He
brings an eight year old boy to
kingship after one of the darkest times in Judahs history.
The Book of the Law had been
left in the temple and not only
had been misplaced but there
was such a gap in the knowledge of the people they didnt
even know it existed. Hilkiahs
words to Shaphan the secretary were, I have found the
Book of the Law. When Josiah
heard the words of the Book
he promptly sought God and
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
began to renew the covenant.
I believe it is safe to say that
the people had lost their way
without the Book of the Law.
Today we have pushed the
Bible away from school, business and government and yes
even the church. Without the
Bible the only form of law we
have is criminal, civil and
administrative no moral law
exists. Without any kind of
moral compass we have lost
our way just as the people in
Judah did. So what can we do
now? Well God told Joshua,
Do not let this Book depart
from your mouth. Seems like
good advise. Take it with you,
live your life accordingly to it
and most importantly love God.
If you never return the love
God gives you why should he
give you more and how is anyone ever going to be able to see
God through you.
Ministry on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback
on Facebook
Who knows?
We know. Buy a subscription, then YOULL know.
(785-448-3121) review@garnett-ks.com
STANDARD
DEER
PROCESSING
$
2×5
Moran Locker
165
Includes
Skinning
3
LOCAL
Vikings XC coach has built a top-notch program
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND The Central
Heights Vikings cross country
team is on an unprecedented
run the past few years as its
just a continuation of a dynasty
which has seen the team win
back-to-back titles that past
two years, including a record
breaking performance at the
2024 2A state championship in
Wamego on November 2nd.
The record the Vikings
broke was their overall team
score of 34 which outpaced
Hutchison Trinity's score of
66. The previous record was
held by Stanton County. In 2019
they tallied a score of 40 which
interestingly enough squandered the Vikings first chance
at back-to-back titles as they
finished in 2nd place after winning the 2018 state title.
What head coach Troy
Prosser has done since taking
over the Vikings is nothing
short of spectacular. It isn't
often that a head coach is successful in his first head coaching job from day one but it
appears every button he has
pushed has been right on point.
Looking back to when Coach
Prosser joined the program in
2016, the team had just 5 runners on the high school squad
and 9 more in middle school.
Last year's team had 38 runners, including middle school
and high school. This is an
obvious sign that students not
only want to be a part of what
Coach Prosser has built, but
they also believe in him as a
coach and mentor.
Back in 2015 during he
first weeks of practice Coach
Prosser said, The strength
so far has
been excellent
work
ethic. When
the runners
see success
it
breeds
confidence,
which
in
Prosser
turn instills
excitement.
A look back at that statement and it couldn't have been
any more true.
In his first season they had
one lone state qualifier, Kyle
Cardin, but since that time the
boys have qualified for state
the past 9 years with 3 state
championships and 2 runner-up finishes in that span.
The girl's program has been
building as well, albeit at a
slower pace.
In Prosser's 4th season, 2018,
the Lady Vikings sent two qualifiers, Lily Meyer and Madison
Bridges, to state which was the
first time in over 20 years a girl
qualified.
The girls have qualified
someone every year since then
and also have finished with a
3rd, 4th and 5th place team finish during that run.
The accolades just go on and
on over the past decade.
Athletes have won an
enough words to explain how
proud and honored I am to
have watched these boys grow
over the past seven years, not
only as runners but as young
men.
It is obvious this talented
group will be missed but at
this point the Vikings are just
expected to have a new wave of
runners step up.
The Viking's coach is a firm
believer to be successful on the
course you have to work hard
in every aspect off the course
as well.
Coach Prosser said before
the season, Being a great
teammate, representing the
school with class, good sportsmanship and improving as a
runner are always the priority.
It isn't just the top runners
that are important to the program.
Every single kid in the
program is important. They
all bring something to the
team that the team needs and
everyone can learn from each
other on a daily basis, Coach
Prosser stated.
The new wave of runners
from the junior varsity team
had a perfect score in every
meet this season as they quite
often occupied the top 7-8 spots
in a meet.
It looks like the dynasty is in
solid hands moving forward.
Colony Christian Church
reminds to be thankful everyday
Pastor Chase Riebel gave a
Thanksgiving sermon on being
thankful for the Kingdom
of God from Psalm 145. God
wants every person to come
to Him but He also wants the
nations to seek Him. There is
and has always been only one
Kingdom that will last forever.
Be thankful that you belong to
that Kingdom. On Monday evenings in December there will
be a small group for the study
of the book Come Home For
Christmas by Matthew West.
Lexy Langworthy led worship accompanied by Ben
Prasko on the Peruvian Cajon.
They played "Great Are You
Lord," "10,000 Reasons," "The
Old Rugged Cross" and "Great
Are You Lord."
Brant McGhee gave the
communion meditation. True
Thanksgiving is sitting at
the Lord's table and being in
communion with our Savior.
Thanksgiving is a lifestyle.
What can we do other than
praise the Lord constantly when Jesus is in our life.
Thanksgiving is every day.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Ben Yoder, Your Kansas Realtor/Auctioneer
The Kansas Property Place, LLC
Cell/Text (785) 448-4419
Office (785) 448-3999
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Ben@KsPropertyPlace.com
501 E. 4th Ave., Garnett, KS
Please dont eat the newspaper.
Read it instead.
Subscribe today by calling (785) 448-3121
or email admin@garnett-ks.com.
Health Services
4×6.5 Health
D IDirectory
RECTORY
Dentistry
Family Care
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
Chiropractic
427 S. Oak
Garnett
Eye Care
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
Feel
better! (785) 448-6590
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
Moran Locker
Downtown Moran
(620) 237-4331
After Hours: (620) 719-0109
incredible 1,424 medals with 98
of them being at the state meet.
They broke 13 school records
and Cody Hammond was the
first ever Viking to win a state
championship in cross country
this year.
As a team they have won
47 team trophies including 9
regional championships and 3
regional runner-up finishes.
As a sign of the commitment the middle schoolers
have shown, the middle school
boys won 6 consecutive league
championships at one point.
Coach Prosser is losing
a super talented and driven group of seniors that the
returning runners will be hard
pressed to duplicate the success, but I'm sure the talented
underclassmen feel like it is
their time to shine.
Five of the top six runners on this year's team were
comprised of seniors Connor
Burkdoll, Cody Hammond,
Christian McCord, Jotham
Meyer and Owen Miller.
Burkdoll and Hammond
normally finished 1st and 2nd
as Hammond broke both the
Vikings school record and
course record this year with a
time of 15:34 at their regional
meet which they hosted.
On the season, the Vikings
were a perfect 187-0 as they
won every invitational they
competed in this year in dominating fashion.
Coach Prosser stated of this
group, There simply aren't
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
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
4
Awarded more than 60 times for excellence in news, opinion and advertsing by
newspaper professionals across the country but our highest honor is your readership.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
OPINION
How Trump can save womens sports
The Biden-Harris administration has done
more damage to womens sports and privacy
than you realize. On Day 1, President Joe Biden
signed an executive order directing the entire
government to infuse gender ideology throughout the nation.
Children should be able to learn without
worrying about whether they will be denied
access to the restroom, the locker room, or
school sports, he said, which, translated into
regular English, means Boys, including 18-yearold seniors, must access girls locker rooms and
sports, if it agrees with their internal sense of
self.
He directed every agency to implement regulations to carry out this policy, and they did.
Today, schools cannot even qualify for school
lunch money unless they implement radical policies that treat men as women, including in the
locker room. (This is all illegal, obviously, and
court challenges have blunted the effect in some
states.)
Unwinding will take some time, and Presidentelect Donald Trump has committed himself to it.
He vowed his administration would use Title IX
to prohibit men from participating in womens
sports. Thats a good start. I was an attorney for
the first Trump White House. I have traveled
the country with Paula Scanlan, who was forced
to strip before Lia Thomas 18 times per week. I
got to know Payton McNabb who was partially
paralyzed by a man spiking a ball at her head.
Heres my take on what can and should be done
immediately.
During Trumps first administration, the
Department of Justice found that a Connecticut
policy permitting men in womens sports cuts
against Title IXs core purpose, to ensure women
have an equal opportunity to participate in educational programs, including sports.
That was correct, which multiple courts have
now agreed with when enjoining Bidens Title IX
rewrite (which requires schools to allow men in
womens locker rooms). The Supreme Court has
indicated it unanimously agrees Title IX cannot
sustain a gender ideology mandate.
The Department of Education Office of Civil
Rights should immediately announce an investigation into a school that fails to protect womens
sports, like San Jose State University, which
continues to permit a male to take the roster spot
of women, endanger women during practices
and matches and silence women from speaking
out. SJSU is only one option. Several schools in
New Hampshire, for example, are directly violating their state law that protects womens sports,
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
MAY MAILMAN INDEPENDENT WOMENS LAW CENTER
claiming Bidens illegal Title IX rewrite gives
them cover.
Title IX is a 1972 law designed to stop schools
from discriminating against women discrimination that included offering them zero athletic
opportunities, except occasionally field hockey.
The Biden-Harris administration seemed to miss
that memo, and says Title IX prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender identity, in document after document. That argument is illegal.
The Department of Education has absolutely no
statutory authority to impose a gender ideology
mandate on our nations female athletes. Delete
all this guidance.
My ideal end solution is to get the federal government out of the school business and return it
to the states. But thats going to take a while. In
the meantime, a new Title IX regulation should
explicitly protect womens sports.
The longstanding regulation says that schools
shall provide equal athletic opportunity for
members of both sexes. As if that needed clarification, Trumps Department of Education should
add that equal opportunity requires a reasonable
number of female-only teams and private spaces
(which is how the statute has been understood
for decades). And as if that needed clarification,
the regulation should define female to mean
an individual belonging to the sex that has the
reproductive role of producing ova.
The NCAA is a multi-billion-dollar organization that strips women of opportunities by
permitting post-pubescent males in the female
category. Before supporting any NCAA wish list
items, which might include name-image-likeness
(NIL) legislation, an exemption from Title IX for
NIL payments (which go predominantly to men),
or breathing room from antitrust investigation,
SEE MAILMAN ON PAGE 7
Its the unions, dummy
Voters soundly rejected the Democratic
Party this month, not just in swing states or
red states. In the bluest of blue communities,
in the nations largest and most liberal cities,
voters moved noticeably to the right. Presidentelect Donald Trump did not, of course, win San
Francisco, Chicago, or New York City, but he
did better in those cities than any Republican
candidate has done in decades…
Soft-on-crime district attorneys funded by
Democratic megadonor George Soros are partly to blame…However, the Democratic Partys
inability to govern goes deeper than that. There
is cancer within the party that makes it incapable
of governing effectively, except in deep-red states.
The problem preventing Democrats from
governing effectively is public sector unions
Big Labor.
,,, When private sector unions suck too much
value out of a private company, and that company can no longer deliver a good product at
a competitive price, the business loses market
share and must negotiate a better deal with its
union employees or go out of business.
… Until the stranglehold public sector unions
have on California and other states run by
Democrats is broken, the party of the Left will
fail to deliver good services at reasonable prices, cities will continue to lose population, and
Democrats will lose elections.
Washington Examiner
Trump may finally succeed in de-federalizing U.S. education
It might come as a surprise to most Americans
that the U.S. Department of Education did not
exist until 1977, and it was created by Jimmy
Carter.
Since that time, the United States has slowly
slipped into the abyss of international academia, falling from one of the best systems in
the world to mediocrity.
The U.S. ranks 39th among industrialized
nations in math and 25th in science, both categories that the U.S. led prior to the federalization
of education.
Surely it must be because education is underfunded in America, right?
According to a study by Newsweek, the
United States spent $11,319 per grade school
pupil in 2018 and $13,776 per high school student. Only Switzerland spent more for a grade
school student and only France spent more for a
high school student.
When factoring in college and technical education, the U.S. spent $16,268 per student, eclipsing the rest of the developed world who spent an
average of $10,759, according to Newsweek.
Clearly education is not underfunded
in Kansas or the rest of the country nor does
it correlate with results in the classroom since
we have been on a downward slope since the
creation of the U.S. Department of Education.
Donald Trump has made it a priority of his
incoming administration to do away with the
bureaucratic nightmare that has become the
federalization of education.
While this has some worried about how we
KANSAS COMMENTARY
EARL WATT, THE LEADER & TIMES
would fund classrooms state by state, there is
a bigger concern if we dont do something
different, how will we be competitive with the
rest of the world?
The biggest issue with the federalization of
education is the same problem that happens any
time government injects itself into society
conformity and lagging standards.
President George W. Bush tried to address
the descent with his program called No Child
Left Behind.
But the problem was trying to nationalize
standards in a way that created the same student from the East Coast to the High Plains.
It also required a ton of paperwork and
increased administrative oversight.
As with all government mandates, the size of
government expanded, and with it the cost, but
the dollars were not spent in the classroom but
on the administration of the programs.
Before the Carter Administration injected
the federal government into education, the focus
was much more on the classroom and the ability
of the educator to provide the necessary knowledge and skills to the students.
Without multiple programs or even the technological tools of today, the educator was a
professional in their field of study, and they
developed their own style and ability to react to
the various students in their classrooms.
Educators were given a specific skill set that
was to be gained by the students, and then they
set out to achieve those goals.
During that time, elementary schools had
a principal, and junior high and high schools
might had a principal and an assistant.
Today the administrative staff has bloated,
various programs have directors, and teachers
have coaches to help them navigate not through
teaching, but through the paperwork and red
tape.
Educators controlled their own discipline,
and parents backed them up.
But today, the multiple programs that have
nothing to do with academic achievement have
lowered the bar and distracted from intellectual
advancement.
The first step back to academic excellence
starts by getting Washington out of the classrooms and allowing states to focus on what is
SEE WATT ON PAGE 5
Black, Latino, degreeless Whites demography isnt destiny for Trump
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
xx
It turns out that everyone underestimated
how a proposal for mass deportations could
bring Americans together. Donald Trump
assembled the biggest, most diverse GOP coalition in decades while running further to the
right on immigration, crime and culture than
perhaps any major-party presidential candidate
in U.S. history.
Trump inveighed against unchecked illegal
immigration in harsh and lurid terms — and
picked up Hispanic voters. Trump pledged to
reverse a brutal plague of bloodshed, crime,
chaos, misery and death in our land — and won
more young voters.
Trump famously dethroned the Republican
establishment in 2016, and now has crushed
its theory of how to forge a GOP future in an
increasingly diverse country. Trump may win
the most electoral votes of a Republican since
George H.W. Bush in 1988. In the 1980s, America
was roughly 80% white, and Hispanics and
Asians were less than 7% and 2% of the population respectively. Now, Hispanics and Asians
are 19.5% and 6.4%, while whites have declined
to 75% of the population.
Weve long been told these changes are a
herald of doom for the Republican Party, and
the GOP can only survive by softening its edges.
This was the admonition of the famous autopsy commissioned by the Republican National
Committee after Mitt Romneys loss to Barack
Obama in 2012. According to the report, the divisive policies and tone of Romneys GOP — yes,
the resolutely polite, earnest and scrupulous
Mitt Romney — were sentencing the party to
demographic extinction.
To win Hispanics, the autopsy insisted,
Republicans must embrace and champion com-
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
prehensive immigration reform, the establishments favorite euphemism for a mass amnesty.
It does not matter, it maintained, what we
say about education, jobs or the economy; if
Hispanics think we do not want them here, they
will close their ears to our policies.
And the partys tone had to change. The
autopsy intoned that we must emphasize
during candidate trainings, retreats, etc., the
importance of a welcoming, inclusive message.
The same applied to young voters: The RNC
must more effectively highlight our young leaders and fundamentally change the tone we use to
talk about issues and the way we are communicating with voters.
Given what we now know, the autopsy could
have said, To thrive in the future, the party
needs to find a forceful, charismatic leader in
his late 70s who often speaks in vivid, crude
terms, and sounds a lot like Pat Buchanan on the
issues.
According to the exit polls, Trump won Latino
men and males ages 18-29, while also gaining
among Asians and black men, and holding his
big edge among whites without college degrees.
Once Trump established working-class credibility on economics, the door was open to
gains among Latino and African-American men
who are patriotic, culturally conservative and
uninterested in being considered members of a
victim group. These voters arent easily offended, so Trumps mode of communication doesnt
bother them.
As for young men, many of them are disaffected from a progressive elite that considers them
inherently hateful and privileged and favors
policies to disadvantage them.
The Biden-Harris border policies, the progressive tolerance for urban disorder, the push
to implement a radical trans agenda and the priorities of woke identity politics struck so many
voters as so completely mad that Trump had
permission to say or do anything in opposition.
It wasnt so much Trump who made the idea
of mass deportation mainstream as the BidenHarris insistence on creating a border crisis and
denying that it was happening.
Also, a crucial backdrop for Trumps success
was the broader economic discontent, as well as
Joe Bidens sheer unpopularity.
All is flux, so perhaps 2024 wont be replicable, but, for now, Trump has shown that demographics isnt destiny. His right-wing populism
has made inroads among a broad range of voter
groups, while Kamala Harris — an emblem of
progressivisms cultural obsessions — picked
up among college-educated whites and among
seniors.
Who looks like the future now?
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
The Anderson County Reviews
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Now I hear theyre going to put residences on
Indian Hills Malls old lot. There are tunnels all
under that place. My late husband, God rest his
soul, worked in the mines all underneath Indian
Springs Mall.
I think our government has lost their mind.
Seeking a new career. The last four years I
have been a professional piano mover. However,
with advanced age and loss of strength I have
embarked on a new career. Im now a professional harmonica mover. If you have one that
needs moving, call 1-800 Harmonica. Thank you.
I was wondering whatever happened to the trap
and release program that was supposed to come
to Garnett for the people who dont like cats or
dogs and just want them to die off naturally?
Contact your elected leadership:
President Joseph Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(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.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
More Capper site finds
My 2nd visit to the Arthur
Capper site. Dont forget metal
detecting only.
With it being so dry and the
ground so hard, I only spent
about 90 minutes detecting.
Trying to not miss any good
targets, I worked each area
slowly and swept the ground
three different directions with
my search coil. These five photos show you todays finds.
#1 – A very large hand
wrought square nail
#2 – Fishing anyone? A 2
oz.lead fishing sinker/weight.
#3 – A brass stud or collar
button. Perhaps you know?
#4 – The backside of above
5
HISTORY
WATT…
Colony Veterans Awarded Quilts of Valor
FROM PAGE 4
DIGGING UP THE PAST
best for their students.
We have to put teachers
back as the focus of how to
best educate children and not
bureaucrats.
It wont happen overnight,
but we will start to see America
perform when we realize that
involving the federal government was the pivot point of
academic decline.
Earl Watt is editor and publisher of The Leader&Times in
Liberal, Ks.
Public Notice
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
button.
#5 – Brass with iron tongue
harness buckle.
Your RIGHT to know,
guaranteed by Kansas Law.
Respectively submitted by:
Henry Roeckers. 11Nov2024
Notice of public hearing regarding
special use permit for an RV park
#1
#2
(Published in the Anderson County Review,
November 21, 2024.)
#3
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-21-2024 / SUBMITTED
#4
East Central Kansas Quilters, a Quilts of Valor group which
serves Anderson and Coffey counties, was honored to have presented quilts to two Colony veterans. On Veterans Day morning,
November 11th, Richard Buckle and Rhonda Mosby were honored
at Crest High School Veterans Day Assembly. Richard served in
the United States Army from 1967 to 1969 during the Vietnam War.
Rhonda Mosby served in the U.S. Navy between 1990 and 1997
and continued as an active Reservist until 2003. To nominate a veteran for a Quilt of Valor, an online form can be found at www.qovf.
org or contact Kent (620-364-9360) or Lori Hoyt (620-364-9361).
#5
Notice is hereby given that the Anderson
County Planning Commission will hold a Public
Hearing on December 16, 2024 at 7:00 P.M. in
the Anderson County Annex, 409 South Oak,
Garnett, Kansas to consider:
Special Use Permit application #SUP202404(McAdam) to have a small RV Park in an
A-1 agriculture district. Said property is
described as follows:
Located at 33452 NE 2200 RD, Greeley
KS in Section Four (4), Township Twenty (20)
South, Range Twenty-one (21) East of the Sixth
Principal Meridian, all in Anderson County,
Kansas.
Any person concerned with this request may
attend the public hearing or submit written comments, opposed or in support, to the Planning
Commission. The Planning Commission may
continue this hearing date to a future date, if
necessary, without further notice.
/s/
Thomas R. Young
Planning & Zoning Director
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
2×3
Agency West
ASSAULT…
FROM PAGE 1
Courtney Tucker, Agent
House Judiciary Committee
said 250 migrants whose
names are on the international terror watch list were
detained at the U.S. southern border in the years 2021,
2022 and 2023, and 99 of those
were allowed to enter and settle in the U.S. On Tuesday,
President-elect Trump con-
firmed his campaign pledge
to use the U.S. Military to
begin deportations of illegals, beginning with criminals, after he takes office in
January.
De La Cruz hearing is
scheduled for 9 a.m. before
Magistrate Judge Kara
Reynolds.
OPEN
FOR
courtney.tucker@agencywestins.com
Auto Health Business & Commercial
Work Comp Bonding Homeowners Life
Recrecreational Vehicle Farm
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
FAMILY-STYLE!
Every Sunday
Friday: Chicken fried steak
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
or chicken fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
Homemade
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
PAN-FRIED
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
CHICKEN
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
2×3
1-Stop
Sunday: Homemade
pan-fried chicken w/sides
We have
pizza!
415 S. Oak St. Garnett (785) 448-2284
BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
Matters
Just 8 bucks a
block per week to
list your
business here!
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
Hecks Moving Service
Millers
Fencing
& Welding
Specializing in
barbed wire
fence
& corrals
Aaron Miller
(785) 433-3878
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Howard Yoder
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 489-2212
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Inspected Facility
Ashton Heck
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
(785) 204-0369
Prairie Lane
Painting
PRINTING
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
review@garnett-ks.com
Residential, interior &
exterior.
Locally owned.
(785) 591-0840
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
1-800-823-8609
Post Frame Construction
Residential Slab Homes
www.yutzyconstruction.com
Advertise here!
Single Ad Blocs just $8 per week.
Call (785) 448-3121
6
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
Notice of Sheriff s Sale
This is an attempt to collect a debt and any
information obtained will be used for that
purpose.
Vernon Valentine
SHERIFF OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued
by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the
said County of Anderson, in a certain cause in
said Court Numbered AN-2024-CV-000029,
wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the
undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed,
I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to
the highest bidder for cash in hand at the west
door of the courthouse in the City of Garnett in
said County, on December 12, 2024, at 10:00
LOGS LEGAL GROUP LLP
Attorneys for Plaintiff
6811 Shawnee Mission Parkway – Suite 309
Overland Park, KS 66202
(913) 831-3000
Fax No. (913) 831-3320
Our File No. 24-014155
nv14t3*
Lovely 3 bedroom 1 bath bungalow on a
large corner lot. Located in a small rural
town. $89000
SOLD
Notice of Suit
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 7, 2024.)
Ty R. Wheeler, #15512
Kansas Legal Services of Emporia
527 Commercial, Suite 201
Emporia, Kansas 66801
(620) 343-7520
(620) 343-6898
wheelert@klsinc.org
Attorneys for Petitioners
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP
AND CONSERVATORSHIP OF:
A.F.
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59
Case No.ANPR000027
NOTICE OF SUIT
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO Jordan Christner
and Kyle McCarty AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
WHO ARE OR MAY BE CONCERNED:
D
L
SO
You are hereby notified that a Petition for
Appointment of Guardianship and Conservator
has been filed in the District Court of Lyon
County, Kansas, by Mary and William
Radar and Paul and Carrie Loar praying for
Guardianship and Conservatorship of minor
child, J.M. and you are hereby required to
plead to the Petition on or before December
11, 2024 at 9:30 in the Anderson County
District Court. Should you fail therein, judgment
and decree will be entered in due course upon
the Petition.
Emporia
/s/ Ty R. Wheeler
Ty R. Wheeler
Kansas Legal Services of
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
GOPPERT STATE SERVICE BANK
Plaintiff,
vs
KORMAN TRUCKING, LLC;
H I S PIPELINE, LLC;
BILLY W. FRANKS, a/k/a BILLY WAYNE
FRANKS;
ONE 2004 WHEELER TRAILER, VIN:
1W9PD312K4M011027; and,
THE KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
an agency of the State of Kansas,
Defendants.
Case #AN-2024-CV-000034
NOTICE OF SUIT
The state of Kansas to H I S Pipeline, LLC;
Billy W. Franks, a/k/a Billy Wayne Franks and to
all other persons who are or may be concerned:
nv7t3*
one 2004 Wheeler trailer, more particularly described above and in said petition and
which is presently situate in Anderson County,
Kansas, be quieted, and that you and each of
you, and any person claiming by, through or
under you and any of you, be forever barred,
restrained and enjoined from setting up or
claiming any right, title, interest, estate, equity,
lien or claim in or to said vehicle.
You are hereby required to plead to the
petition on or before the 20th day of December,
2024, in the above court at Garnett, Kansas. If
you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be
entered in due course upon said petition.
TERRY J. SOLANDER #7280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
201 N. Maple
Garnett, Ks., 66032
benjaminrealty201@gmail.com
CHARMING 1.5-STORY HOME! 3-bedroom, 1.5-bath home. Hardwood floors.
Newer roof. Fireplace. Full basement.
Metal siding. Concrete pad to build your
garage on. $115,000.
CUTE AND COZY! 2-bedroom, 1-bath
ranch style home. Newer metal roof
could $AVE you $ on insurance. Newer
Pex plumbing. Brick patio. Attached 1-car
garage. Corner lot. $120,000.
ESCAPE TO YOUR CABIN! 1-bedroom,
1-bath 5-year-old ranch style home on
11 acres m/l. Attached 2-car garage
could be turned into additional living
space. Carport. Storage building. Fenced.
$239,999.
GREAT NEIGHBORHOOD! 3-bedroom, 1-bath ranch style home on
a corner lot. New central heat and
air. Remodeled bathroom. Attached
1-car carport with attached 1-car
garage. Privacy fenced yard. $125,000.
Beth Mersman 785.448.7500 Deb Price 913.244.1101
Lisa Sears 785.448.8454 Holly Byerley 913.256.9486 Ben Yoder 785.448.4419
Kelly Tippetts 785.418.1732 Steve Weese 785.433.1170
913-884-4500
Chris Cygan 785-418-5435
OTTAWA BEAUTY! Location-Location!! Super clean ranch style
home on cul de sac street in south Ottawa. 3 bdrms, 2.5 baths, full
finished daylight basement, custom hardwood flooring, granite counters in kitchen, 2-car attached garage, storage shed. Backyard oasis
with great deck overlooking paver padio with relaxing waterfall and
coy pond. You have to see this one to appreciate…
AND ONLY $329,000
TOWN SQUARE Historic building on the square! Newer roof, central heat and AC. Even has a partial basement.This has been a prime
retail spot in downtown Garnett for generatoins. Now you can make it
what youd like and/or need for your business, or own an investment
property that is a piece of the towns history. $74,900
ING
ND
SALE PE
PRICE REDUCED TO $69,900…OWNER SAYS BRING US AN OFFER!
or purchase with inventory and continue the current business!!
CLOSE TO TOWN 57 acres right at the edge of Garnett! 3
bedroom ranch style home fixer upper with attached 2 car garage.
D on 2 sides. Property
Detached garage and 2 barns. RoadL
O frontage
has 2 phone towers for extra
Priced to sell at $279,500
Sincome.
WELLSVILLE OPPORTUNITY Large corner lot, zoned commercial, large shop building with open
sided lean-to. Has electric service,
D
L
water and sewer availble. Endless
uses possible for your business or
buy for fantastic investment.
SOOnly $140,000 $129,900
Need to sell? Just call, well get it done!
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
nv7t3*
Audrey LeVota …………….(785) 893-2231
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 7, 2024.)
and Kyle McCarty AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
WHO ARE OR MAY BE CONCERNED:
Ty R. Wheeler, #15512
Kansas Legal Services of Emporia
527 Commercial, Suite 201
Emporia, Kansas 66801
(620) 343-7520
(620) 343-6898
wheelert@klsinc.org
Attorneys for Petitioners
You are hereby notified that a Petition for
Appointment of Guardianship and Conservator
has been filed in the District Court of Lyon
County, Kansas, by Mary and William
Radar and Paul and Carrie Loar praying for
Guardianship and Conservatorship of minor
child, A.F. and you are hereby required to plead
to the Petition on or before December 11, 2024
at 9:30 in the Anderson County District Court.
Should you fail therein, judgment and decree
will be entered in due course upon the Petition.
NOTICE OF SUIT
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO Jordan Christner
Call Sherry (785) 304-2029
501 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
info@KsPropertyPlace.com Call (785) 448-3999
Notice of Suit
IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP
AND CONSERVATORSHIP OF:
J.M.
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59
Case No.ANPR000028
Manufactured home with 1056 sq. ft.
3 bedrooms and 2 baths. 2 car carport.
Located near elementary school in
Greeley. Central heat and air. Sold ASIS $110,000.
Bungalow style home built in 1924.
600 sq. ft. Screened front porch. 2
bedrooms and 1 bath. Metal roof. 1 car
carport. SOLD AS-IS $75000
The Place To Find Your Place
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
GOPPERT STATE
SERVICE BANK
Plaintiff
You and each of you are hereby notified
that a petition has been filed in the abovenamed court by plaintiff, praying that title to
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
Lovely ranch style home with 1196 sq.
ft. Locate at the edge of town. Walking
distance to the area high school. Large
yard. $179,500.
Attorney for Petitioner
Notice of Suit
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 7, 2024.)
Vintage elegance 1920s 1
1/2 story bungalow. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, formal
dining room with fireplace,
Large front porch
Emporia
/s/ Ty R. Wheeler
Ty R. Wheeler
Kansas Legal Services of
Attorney for Petitioner
nv7t3*
Everything Spencer Walter ……………(785) 304-2119
Walter ……………(785) 304-6720
we touch Sammy
Brandon Bennedict ………(785) 448-5350
turns to Bryce Fritz………………….(785) 304-2336
Devin Katzer ………………(785) 304-1127
sold!
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
107 N Cleveland Garnett
New wood floors, spacious main bathroom
completely remodeled, Full unfinished
basement. Attached 1-car garage, outbuildigs, horse barn, 2.5 acres.
425 W 1st Ave. Car Wash
The Bulldog Car Wash is a well maintained
and profitable Car Wash business in Garnett.
Equipped with modern facilities and easy-touse payment options.
19075 SW Kabuls Ave Welda
Free gas! 2 bedroom 1 bath ranch home with
an attached 1-car garage is nestled in the heart
of a small town. Recently updated with brand
new flooring in the kitchen.
108 S Hayes St. Garnett
Previously a duplex, with the right buyer or
handyman, this property can be transformed
back into a rent-generating duplex. Each unit
features 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, an open
kitchen, and a family room. The property includes a 2-car garage, with each side having
its own 1-car garage.
"
Case No. AN-2024-CV-000029
Div. No.
K.S.A. 60
TITLE TO REAL ESTATE INVOLVED
Commonly known as 18879 Southwest Iola
Street, Welda, Kansas 66091
The Perfect Home for those just starting out or
those who are ready to downsize. Located in a
quiet friendly neighborhood located at the edge of
town overlooking an open field. Close to area High
School and just blocks from the local shopping area.
This lovely ranch was built in 1971 with 1196 sq. ft.
all on one level for easy living. It has updated flooring in the living room, kitchen and utility room.
New roof summer of 2024, new central heat and
air, water heater is 3 yrs old. Two solar attic fans
reduces high humidity during summer months.
Large living room, open kitchen and dining area.
3 bedrooms and 1 bath. 1 car attached garage. 10 x
10 storage shed is great for all your lawn equipment
and tools. Setting on a acre lot. Call Benjamin
Realty at (785) 304-2029 today for price and
your private showing.
"
THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, F/K/A
THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS TRUSTEE
FOR REGISTERED HOLDERS OF CWABS,
INC., ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES,
SERIES 2004-12
PLAINTIFF
vs.
BRAD MCGREGOR, et al.
DEFENDANTS
ALL THAT CERTAIN PARCEL OF LAND
SITUATE IN THE CITY OF WELDA, COUNTY
OF ANDERSON AND STATE OF KANSAS,
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS
FOLLOWS:
THE NORTH HALF OF LOTS 4, 5 AND 6, IN
BLOCK 3.
"
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
a.m., of said day the following described real
estate located in the County of Anderson, State
of Kansas, to wit:
"
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, November 14, 2024.)
(785) 448-7658
community
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
Health department
warns of sponsor scam
CALENDAR
Thursday, November 21, 2024
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 22, 2024
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Monday, November 25, 2024
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
2:00 p.m. – Harvesters
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – PM Hot Yoga with
Janelle
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
10:00 a.m. – Storytime at Garnett
Public Library
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
5:30 p.m. – Zumba Class
6:30 p.m. – Shotokan Karate Training
Thursday, November 28, 2024
Thanksgiving Day
Friday, November 29, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Saturday, November 30, 2024
4:00 p.m. – Garnett Fire Department
Chili/Soup Supper
6:30 p.m. – 53rd Annual GACC
Christmas Parade
Sunday, December 1, 2024
1:00 p.m. – Holiday Boutique hosted
by the Garnett BPW
Monday, December 2, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
9:00 a.m. – Friendship Quilters Mtg
4:00 p.m. – Greeley PTO
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club Mtg
6:00 p.m. – Hot Yoga with Jenelle
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lions
Lodge No. 338 Meeting
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Community
Foundation Board
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
Board Meeting
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
3:30 p.m. – Tinkering & Tech hosted
by the Garnett Public Library
5:30 p.m. – Bulldog Booster Club Mtg
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Elementary Site
Council
5:30 p.m. – Zumba Class
6:30 p.m. – Shotokan Karate
Training
6:30 p.m. – Parks & Recreation
Advisory Board Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Colony Lions Club Mtg
7:00 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club Mtg
Thursday, December 6, 2024
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch & Snacks
at Garnett Senior Center
6:30 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
7:00 p.m. – USD 365 BOE Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, December 7, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Monday, December 9, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
9:30 a.m. – American Legion
Auxiliary Meeting
12:00 p.m. – GACC Board Meeting
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 Meeting
7:00 p.m. – American Legion Mtg
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Housing
Authority Advisory Board Mtg
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
IOLA The local public health
department is warning about
sponsor scam approaching
local businesses.
Becky Johnson with the
Southeast Kansas MultiCounty Health Department
notified area press last week
the illegitimate scheme had
already approached some area
businesses.
"If you or your business have
been contacted by Promotional
Specialties
International
requesting donations on behalf
of the SEK Multi-County Health
Department or "Bourbon
County Health Department,"
please be aware that this is
Cost sharing continues to be offered
for soil tests in Anderson County
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-21-2024 / SUBMITTED
Christy Ratliff, 2nd from right, recently competed in Louisville, Kentucky at the North American LIvestock
Show.
Ratliff wins numerous awards at livestock show
Christy Ratliff of Ratliff
Jerseys competed in the North
American Livestock Show in
Louisville, KY., on November
11, 2024. The 1st and 2nd place
winners at the All American
Jersey Show were named
All American & Reserve All
American at the show.
Ratliff Money Vixen: All
American Cheese Class winner, Honorable Mention Sr.
Champion, Honorable Mention
Grand Champion of the All
American Jersey Show and
Best Bred & Owned of the All
American Jersey Show. Ratliff
Victorious Virtue-ET (17 in
class): All American Winter
Yearling in Milk. Ratliff Kid
Rock Cobra-ET (31 in class) All
American Sr. Yearling in Milk.
Ratliff Comerica Dana-ET (43
in class) Reserve All American
not a legitimate request,
Johnson said. "They have falsely claimed that we are seeking
sponsorships for t-shirts and
now calendars, which is not the
case. This group has previously
engaged in similar activities,
successfully obtaining funds
from several businesses under
the pretense of supporting our
local health department. We
strongly advise against making
any donations to this organization."
Numerous complaints are
noted in the Better Business
Bureau for the same issues in
other states, Johnson said.
By Carol Engle, Frontier Extension
District Communications and
Marketing Manager
GARNETT As the 2024 crops
are now harvested, its a good
time to consider soil tests for
the 2025 planting season. As
announced earlier this year,
Anderson County producers
have the opportunity to test
soil samples at reduced costs
thanks to a joint partnership between the Anderson
County Conservation District,
the
Anderson
County
Commissioners
and
the
Frontier Extension District.
The full prices for soil tests conducted through Kansas State
University begin at $13.50 for
a package Number 1 that tests
pH, buffer pH, Phosphorus and
Potassium. With the cost sharing arrangement that began
mid-2024, the price for that test
is only $3.50, with a limit of
10 tests per producer per year.
Winter Calf. Best 3 Females
Reserve All American. Ratliff
Skyler Divine 7th Summer 2 yr.
old; Ratliff Vibe Daisy 10th Sr. 2
Yr old,; Mer-James VIP FinnyET 4th Jr. 3 Yr old (31 in class);
Budjon-Vail Victorious Blayke
7th Jr. 3 Yr old. Ratliff Jerseys
were the Premier Breeder of
the show and Reserve Premier
Exhibitor.
To receive the reduced prices,
the producer must fill out the
paperwork at the Extension
office when shipping the sample(s). The $10 cost share is also
offered for other test packages
offered by K-State.
One of the biggest benefits
to this program continues to
be to help ensure good water
quality, said Ryan Schaub,
Frontier District agent specializing in crop production and
farm management. With this
program, we can better track
where nutrients are being
applied and at what amounts
they are being applied. In turn,
this information helps us know
where these nutrients could
potentially end up in an erosion event.
Anyone with questions
about soil testing can contact
the Frontier District office in
Garnett at 785.448.6826.
Thanksgiving holiday
refuse schedule for Garnett
Mark your calendar for
Thanksgiving, as the refuse
schedule will be changed for
most of the routes that week.
Monday, November 25 Monday route
Tuesday, November 26 Tuesday & Wednesday toutes
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-21-2024 / SUBMITTED
Woodys Liquor hosted a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Saturday, November 9, featuring wine tasting,
food, and a special highlightthe deer. The Garnett Chamber of Commerce would like to congratulate
Remi Peterson and Cami Burns on the new endeavor.
MAILMAN…
FROM PAGE 1
the NCAA should comply with
Title IXs purpose of protecting
womens sports.
Three states (Idaho, West
Virginia and Arizona) are
currently unable to protect
womens sports due to rogue
court interpretations that the
14th Amendment and Title
IX require men in womens
sports. Ask the Supreme Court
to review and overturn these
unhinged decisions.
May Mailman is the director of
Independent Womens Law
Center (iwlc.org).
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
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Call to Subscribe
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We will not be open for business Thursday, Nov. 28, or
Friday, Nov. 29. Highway branch open Saturday.
Garnett Gardner
Princeton
Ottawa
Lake Ozark, Mo.
www.patriotsbank.com
MAKE MONEY.
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!!
Visit
Miami
County!
3×5
These Miami County businesses appreciate your
Miami Co
patronage
andGuide
encourage you to visit your local
merchants in Miami County!
Our wine
selection is
unsurpassed!
Classied ads
only three dollars.
545 Main, OSAWATOMIE
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
913-755-2514
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
Dont justWEEK
sit there… place
yourfor
ad now
by phone!
EVERY
just
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ads!
(785)
842-6440
(800)
683-4505
LADIES
FASHIONS
GIFTS
W-TH-F ads@tradingpostdeals.com
10-5 / SAT. 10-3/CLOSED MON. & TUES.
1403 Baptiste Dr.
M-Sat 9am-11pm
PAOLA 913-557-5600 Sun Noon-8pm
To advertise your business
here
contact Stacey at (785)
448-3121.
MIDWEST COLLISION INC.
www.tradingpostdeals.com
Freelance Writer/Reporter
2×3
Patriots
Wednesday, November 27 Thursday and Friday routes
Thursday, November 28 No service
Friday, November 29 – No
service
Sunday, December 1 Highway Route
The Anderson County Review is in search of freelance writers
who can write feature stories and cover
occasional straight news assignments.
Some experience preferred but well
train you if youve got the chops. Remote
workers okay most interviews/ research
conducted online, by phone or email. Work
from home or from our office in Garnett.
Pay is by assignment. Must follow schedules
and understand what the word DEADLINE means.
Contact publisher Dane Hicks
at review@garnett-ks.com.
31570 Old KC Rd. PAOLA (913) 294-4016
2×3
Farmers State
Bank
We will not be open for business
Thursday, November 28.
We will close at 3 p.m. Friday, November 29.
We will re-open for normal
business hours Monday.
www.fsbkansas.com
8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
GCG
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2
on August 30, 2024.
Hollis Grewing was booked into jail on
October 6, 2024.
Porfirio De La Cruz-Cantu was booked into
jail on October 10, 2024.
Carlos Marquez-Mejia was booked into jail on
October 14, 2024.
Jennifer McSwane was booked into jail on
October 21, 2024.
Joshua Lohff was booked into jail on October
22, 2024.
Erika Bond was booked into jail on October
31, 2024.
Jennifer McBrearty was booked into jail on
November 8, 2024.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
(as of November 13, 2024)
Christomer Hassell was booked into jail on
September 12, 2024.
MARNELL…
FROM PAGE 1
Jeff Lutz and Debbie Ramsey home (pictured above) is one of the homes on the Friends of the Library Homes Tour on
December 1st. Purchase your tickets at the library. The tour includes: Garnett Library for refreshments and music, the
Methodist Church for the musical bells and more, the Kirk House, the home of Ed & Heather Ahlensorf and Jeff Lutz and
Debbie Ramsey.
hearings are public, so defendants and
their attorneys may want to avoid damaging advance publicity or possibly
additional charges should more violations of law be alleged in the course
Doyle Stryker was booked into jail on
September 14, 2024.
Delwin Watkins was booked into jail on
September 14, 2024.
Jesse King was booked into jail on September
30, 2024.
Eric Green was booked into jail on October
29, 2024.
Curtis Lucas was booked into jail on October
29, 2024.
Eli Collis was booked into jail on October 29,
2024.
Charity Blackburn was booked into jail on
October 30, 2024.
Joseph Steinke was booked into jail on
November 9, 2024.
David McGinn was booked into jail on
November 9, 2024.
Allen Bailey was booked into jail on November
9, 2024.
Julio Casanovavega was booked into jail on
November 9, 2024.
Edward Hunter was booked into jail on
November 9, 2024.
of the proceeding. The move can also
be made by a defendant considering
pleading guilty in exchange for a plea
deal, so as not to reveal a defense strategy and use that position as leverage in
negotiations.
Jason Marnell is being held in the
Franklin County Jail on the charge in
lieu of $500,000 bond.
THE REVIEWS 26TH ANNUAL
RULES
1. Collect your receipts and coupons
dated Nov. 14-Dec. 17 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. 17.
ipating merchants, receive one ticket
(excludes bank deposits). Maximum
250 tickets per receipt. Take your
receipts and coupons to Garnett
Publishing to receive your tickets.
3. In additon to sales receipts, Garnett
Publishing will issue one ticket per
week, per household, no purchase
necessary. Simply stop by 112 W. 6th
Avenue in Garnett to get your weekly
47
2. For every $10 spent at these partic-
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 19 edition of The Anderson County Review.
Grand prize must be claimed by 5
p.m. Monday, Dec. 23.
5. Weekly winning ticket numbers will
be hidden within The Great Christmas
Giveaway ad section during the Nov.
21, Nov. 28, Dec. 5, and Dec. 12 issues
of the Review. Weekly winning ticket
numbers must be claimed by 5 p.m.
the following Tuesday.
6. All prize monies are issued in certificates redeemable only at The Great
Christmas Giveaway participating
Fried
Catfish
This
% OFF Saturday!
ALL GIFT
SUBSCRIPTIONS
Were celebrating the election of the
47th U.S. president by offering 47% off
the regular 1-year or 2-year subscription to
The Anderson County Review!
Need Christmas ideas?
1-Stop Gift Certificates
make great gifts!
Call (913) 898-6211
363075
52 weekly hard copy AND digital editions per year.
Includes gift card to recipient.
Call (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
SPENDING MONEY
just by watching these
merchants ads in The Review.
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.
Stuff your stocking
with Trade Winds
gift certificates.
(785) 448-5856
$1,000
GRAND PRIZE
You can win extra
7. Any unclaimed prizes as of 5 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 17, will be awarded to
the Grand Prize winner.
110 W. 5th Garnett
PRIZES:
and eight
$50 weekly prizes
merchants.
Order your
party trays early!
Perfect for your home or office event.
Well help you plan quantities & selections.
Mon.-Fr. 8-5:30 Sat. 8-4 Closed Sun.
22800 NW 1700 Rd Garnett (785) 204-1961
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
Chapter Y
P.E.O. Meets
Chapter Y P.E.O members met
November 18, 2024 at 7 p.m. in the
Archer Room at the Garnett Public
Library. Lucille Holderman and
Lynda Feuerborn were hostesses
for the evening. It was announced
that Janay Blome was transferring to Chapter IU in Manhattan,
Ks. Chapter Y P.E.O. will host the
Seven Stars Spring Kling on April
5, 2025 from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. The
event will be at the First Christian
Church. Members picked the committee they wished to serve on for
the event.
The Christmas Social will be at
6:30 p.m. on December 2, 2024 at the
home of Alice Anderegg. Members
are to RSVP by November 22, 2024.
Hostesses will be Becky Solander,
Donna Benjamin, Stacy Gwin,
Denise Weber and Rita Boydston.
Donna Benjamin presented an interesting program about her Mountain
Dulcimer. She entertained us by
playing it.
Save your
receipts and
merchant-issued
GCG coupons from
these merchants
today and earn
your tickets.
The more you
spend, the more
tickets you earn.
Watch these ads
each week for your
ticket numbers
and win instant
weekly $50 prizes!
GCG
Garnett Lions Club enjoyed
Thanksgiving dinner on 11/18
Garnett Lions Club
members met for their
annual Thanksgiving dinner Monday night at the
VFW Hall at the clubs regular meeting time at 6 PM
After a short business
meeting to discuss the clubs
coming projects, breakfast
with Santa, kids Christmas
party and the clubs entry in
the Garnett Area, Chamber
of Commerce Christmas
parade, club members,
and some of their spouses
enjoyed several rounds of
bingo.
Caller and club president
Skip Landis donned his
bright green St. Patricks
Day tie and starch white
shirt to add ambience to the
bingo festivities.
Among the winners of
the bingo matches, prizes,
for which were large and
small chocolate turkeys,
were Alice Canavan, Mike
Canavan, Alan Highberger,
Richard Kinder, Chelsey
DAlbini and Katrina
Fisher.
The Garnett Lions Club
meets the second and fourth
Mondays of the month at
6 PM at the guard at VFW
Hall in Crystal Lake Park.
Who knows?
We know. Buy a subscription, then YOULL know.
(785-448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
Hyatt Club met 11/14
Hyatt Club met on
Nov. 14th, 2024 at the First
Christian Church, hostesses
were Marilyn Benjamin and
Linda Miller.
They had fixed soups and
members brought sides to go
with the menu. They were
decorated for fall and for
Veterans Day. Marilyn said
the prayer and we enjoyed
our meal. Mystery gifts were
passed around while we ate
and Patty Mosher guessed a
pair of stockings and Becky
King won the other one with
the guess of a night light.
Hostess gifts were won by the
member with the most grandkids and that was Sandra
Hamilton and the other one
was Shirley Benjamin guessing the #15. Our keepsake for
each one of us was a cute
clutch that had sticky notes
and we all read a little note
about dads and grandpas with
fond memories remembering
Sponsors of the
Great Christmas Giveaway!
One-Stop – Parker
7th Street Grocery
ACE Hardware- Garnett
Arnolds Prairie Greenhouse & More
Auburn Pharmacy
Baumans Carpet & Furniture
Garnett Home Center
Garnett Publishing, Inc
GSSB
Pizza Hut
Trade Winds
our veterans.
Dues were collected and
drawing for new secret pals
for 2025. Sign up sheet was
passed around for next year's
hostesses. Birthday girls
for the month of November
were Sherry Benjamin, Hilda
Lankard, Sandra Hamilton
and Erin Miller. They all
received their gifts from secret
pals. Kathy Waring received a
Just because gift from her
secret pal. It was good to see
members we have not seen for
awhile. Diane read the minutes and gave the treasurers
report. Prayers are needed
for our Hyatt Club families
and remembering them with
a card. Our December meeting is yet to be annouced. As
always we cherish our time
together and happiness and
laughter is good for the soul.
Secretary, Becky King
PARADE…
9
FROM PAGE 1
pre-selected volunteers. Floats
will be judged on creativity,
originality, and depiction of
theme. All floats, cars/trucks,
horseback, motorcycles, etc.
need to be lined up at the
RayMeyer Gym at the times
stated above. Remember, Santa
doesnt ride on any entered
floats he prefers to come at
the end of the parade.
The Chamber window judging contest will also be Nov. 30
with winners announced at the
parade.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
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.
Many thanks to you, our customers!
Closed Thanksgiving Day
November 28, 2024
785-448-6122 429 N. Maple Street, Garnett
M-F 8:30-6:30 & Sat. 8:30-2:00
AuBurnPharmacies.com
Play the 2024
Great Christmas
Giveaway!
In observance of the
Thanksgiving Holiday, we will not be open
for business Thursday, November 29.
We will close at noon Friday, and
no branch locations will be open Saturday.
GSSB
All locations
will reopen
Monday morning
to serve you!
10
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in
the
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
CLASSIFIEDS
it
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it
it for something?
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Its EASY to place
your ad! it (785)
448-3121 (800) 683-4505it admin@garnett-ks.com it
it
REAL ESTATE
Advertising Rates
Classified Rates:
Up to 20 Words …………………….$6.00
Each addtl word……………………..64
(Commercial) …………………………76
Class Display……………..$9.85/clm.in.
Run Of Press Rates:
Standard ROP ……………$9.00/clm.in.
Color……………………………………..$65
Pre-print inserts ……………….$158.40
Front Page
Masthead Banner (w/color) ……$300
Bottom Page (w/color)…………..$100
Statewide/multi-state ………… Quote
1x1property
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
source
Chris Cygan
785-418-5435
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
CALL CRYSTAL METCALFE
TO SELL YOUR HOME
C-(913) 579-5288
O-(816) 629-4494
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classified Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL:
admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
FOR RENT
3 bedroom house freshly
painted inside, new flooring
in kitchen and bathroom, in
Burlington, Kansas. (913) 6344085.
nv7t4*
REAL ESTATE
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
Call
(785) 448-3999
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
HELP WANTED
Part-time custodian help
$15.40 (up to 4 hours a day) at
Crest school. Substitute custodian help $15.09. Apply at Crest
USD 479, 603 Broad Street,
Colony.
nv14t2
MISCELLANEOUS
Cracked Pecans – $5/lb. (785)
867-3671.
nv14t2*
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
Association @ 785-271-5304 tod
ay!
Attention: Viagra and Cialis
Users! A cheaper alternative to
high drugstore prices! 50 Pill
Special – Only $99! 100% guaranteed. Call Now: 1-866-481-0668
We Buy Vintage Guitars!
Looking for 1920-1980 Gibson,
Martin, Fender, Gretsch,
Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite,
Rickenbacker, Prairie State,
DAngelico, Stromberg. And
Gibson Mandolins / Banjos.
These brands only! Call for a
quote: 1-877-560-1992
Paying Top Ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 1-866481-0636
Got an unwanted car???
Donate it to Patriotic Hearts.
Fast free pick up. All 50 States.
Patriotic Hearts programs
help veterans find work or
start their own business. Call
24/7: 1-877-560-5087
Bath & Shower Updates in
as little as one day! Affordable
prices – No payments for 18
months! Lifetime warranty &
professional installs. Senior &
Military Discounts available.
Call: 1-866-481-0747
MISCELLANEOUS
MUSIC
Stop overpaying for health
insurance! A recent study
shows that a majority of people struggle to pay for health
coverage. Let us show you how
much you can save. Call Now
for a no-obligation quote: 1-888519-3376 You will need to have
your zip code to connect to the
right provider.
Injured in an accident? Dont
Accept the insurance companys first offer. Many injured
parties are entitled to cash settlements in the $10,000s. Get
a free evaluation to see what
your case is really worth. 100%
Free Evaluation. Call Now:
1-888-920-1883
Aging
Roof ?
New
Homeowner? Storm Damage?
You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind
their work. Fast, free estimate.
Financing available. Call 1-877589-0093 Have zip code of property ready when calling!
Water Damage Cleanup &
Restoration: A small amount
of water can lead to major damage in your home. Our trusted professionals do complete
repairs to protect your family
and your homes value! Call
24/7: 1-877-586-6688. Have zip
code of service location ready
when you call!
American
Log
Homes
Developer Liquidation Sale!
Log Home kits selling for
Balance Owed. Up to 50% off.
Design plans can be modified!
No time limit on delivery. Call
1-877-616-8481, M-F 9am5pm
ET.
Need New Windows? Drafty
rooms? Chipped or damaged
frames? Need outside noise
reduction? New, energy efficient windows may be the
answer! Call for a consultation
& FREE quote today. 1-866-7665558 You will need to have your
zip code to connect to the right
provider.
Piano tuning/repair – Paul
Benner, BA Piano Technology.
45 years, all types, players. (785)
691-8844.
my7tf
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
SERVICES
European
Deer Mounts
Max
Worthington
Garnett, Ks
(785) 448-8936
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Monthly Specials
Card of Thanks
With an abundance of
appreciation the family of
Kenneth Petersilie would
like to thank the community
for all your support since
his passing. We are grateful
and blessed to have
so many friends.
1×2
AD
*2 RINGS (MAYBE 3) ALL DAY*
Car- 2018 Buick LaCross only
76k Miles; Very Nice car.
Far Too much to list…
Frank and his wife Ruth have
collected Quality Antiques
since 1939. Up for auction
is their complete collection.
From glassware to oil cans,
folk memorabilia. And much
more. We guarantee this will
be the largest Antique auction of the year! Go to
mcginnisauctionservice.com
for full listing and photo gallery
McGinnis Auction ServiceMound City, Kansas
daltonmcginnis@clinchrealty.com(620) 215-3159
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Winning
$$$$ in the Great Christmas
Giveway! See todays paper for
details.
nv21t4
Happiness is… 7th Street
Grocery being the only grocery
store participating in The Great
Christmas Giveaway shopping
promotion. nv21tf
Happiness is… Buying your
ticket to attend the annual Friends of the Library
Holiday Homes Tour. Sunday,
December 1, 1pm-4pm. Tickets
on sale at the library. $8
advance, $10 day of tour. nv14t3
Happiness is… celebrating
your wedding anniversary
with a FREE announcement
and photo in the Review. Go to
www.garnett-ks.com and click
the form under Submit News.
Available FREE 24 hours/day!
mc1tf
Precision Enterprises is seeking a part-time administrative professional. Knowledge of Accounting and
QuickBooks Online is a plus. Duties include Payable, Receivables, Payroll, and various construction
related tasks. Please contact
our office for an application.
(785) 504-9500
office@precisionenterprises.com
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2×2 jb construction
Mark Davis Estate Auction
Nov 23, 2024 10am
22512 Hadsall Rd Parker Ks
Frank & Ruth Harlow
Nov 30, 2024 8 am706 W. Locust St., Mound City, Ks.
Happiness is…Buying your
baked goodies for Thanksgiving
at a benefit bake sale November
27th, 8:30am-? at Prairie Home
Flea Market, 600 North Maple.
nv21t1*
2×4 focus
Anderson County
news DAILY
Living Estate Antiques & Collectibles Auction
it
COFFEY COUNTY
AUCTION!
Coffey County Farmstead
Discover the charm of country living with
this exceptional Coffey County, KS
property, proudly offered by Vaughn-Roth
Land Brokers on behalf of the Rolf Family
through an online auction. Featuring a
3,000 sq ft home consisting of 3 bedrooms
and 1 3/4 baths with modern updates.
Outside you'll find a 40×72 machine shed,
24×48 pole barn, 12×14 metal shed and
large pond all on 12 +/- Acres.
Location: 935 Verdure Rd.,
LeRoy, Kansas
Online Auction to begin on December 3rd,
2024 at Noon with a dynamic closing
starting at Noon on December 5th, 2024.
For more information, please visit our
website or call Kristi Noonan at
785-633-5942
SELLER: Rolf Family
VaughnRoth.com
Sellers of
Premium
Farms & Ranches
620-888-3040
Trailers- 4x8x Utility Trailer; Truck Bed Livestock Racks; 20 Deckover frame; 20 Gooseneck 2 horse Trailer; Several RV Trailers; 10
2 Horse Trailer; 3 Horse Slant Ponderosa Gooseneck Trailer; 14
Livestock Trailer w/ 1 divider; 20
Flatbed Gooseneck Trailer; 16 Pintle
Hitch Equipment trailer.
Huge selection of tools; Mowers- John Deere L110 50 Cut Lawn
Mower; Cub Cadet LT 1050 50 Cut;
Push Mower.
Tack- Huge offering of Bits and
Tack; HeadStalls; Gag Bits; High Port; Copper Bits; Reins; Breast
Straps; Galeg Spurs; Jingle Bob; Stirrups including raw hide and
aluminum and much more
Trucks- 2005 Ford F-350 (parts only)
Diesel Motor; 1996 Ford F-350 XLT
Powerstroke 7.4 Diesel Motor, Dully &
only 130k Miles; sold w/ Camper Shell
2×4, Centurion; 2006 Ford F-250 4×4,
333k Miles, 6.0 Diesel Engine; 1982
Dodge Ram, 350 Custom, 134k Miles
2×4, Club Cab; 1990 Ford f-250 w/Bale Spike.
Power Tools- Shindaiwa Chainsaw in case; Echo Chain saw in case;
Seed Broadcaster John Deere; Stihl D34AU Chainsaw; Heavy Duty
Log Splitter; Harden Trailer and much more
Implements- 5 Disc 3pt; 6 3pt Blade; 10 Pull
Type Disc.
Heston- Cast Models; Tons of new Buckles;
Pins and more
Saddles- Robert Teskey Rough out Saddles
Aubrey Texas; Carl Hutton Weatherford Texas
Padded cutting Horse Saddle; World Champion Custom Made By Billy Cook 7386 Cutting
Horse Saddle; ASD High Back high fork
Saddle; Vintage High Back High Fork Saddle;
Saddle King Vintage Roping Saddle and more
Knives- Kabar; Matt Kune Knives; Deer Antler Knives; Surgical; Kabar 2715; WWll Commemorative; Buffalo Skinner;
Desert Storm Commemorative; Leatherman; Sharade; Case; Sharp; Buck; Bear; Old Timer; Barlow.
McGinnis Auction ServiceMound City, Kansas
daltonmcginnis@clinchrealty.com(620) 215-3159
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
11
LOCAL
6×21
Baumans
Furniture built to last through years of lazy nights and guest-filled weekends.
Power Tilt
Space Saver Sofa
SUPER
SALE
$1699
Power Headrest
& Lumbar with Pullout
Cupholders!
Sug. Retail: $2,869
Our Price: $2,159
Power
Space Saver
Recliner
SUPER
SALE
$899
SUPER
SALE
Sug. Retail: $1,519
Our Price: $1,139
Sug. Retail: $2,809
Our Price: $2,109
Get AHH-mazing relaxation when you sink
into this super cozy furniture.
Big Mans Space Saver Recliner
$1649
Rocker Recliner
The perfect place to curl up and unwind. Take home this 3 piece set, an exceptional value!
Power Tilt
Space Saver Loveseat
Space Saver Recliner
Heat &
Massage!
SUPER
SALE
$2359
Sug. Retail: $3,969
Our Price: $2,979
SUPER
SALE
$1029
SUPER
SALE
Sug. Retail: $1,739
Our Price: $1,299
Sug. Retail: $1,169
Our Price: $879
Looking for durable
power recline?
SUPER
SALE
Find it here at Baumans!
Lifetime Warranty
Frame & Mechanics
$699
SUPER
SALE
Manual Reclining
Space Saver Loveseat
$799
Sug. Retail: $1,249
Our Price: $999
$1179
Sug. Retail: $1,989
Our Price: $1,489
Manual Reclining
Space Saver Sofa
Swivel Glider
Recliner
USA Made All Hardwood Frame
SUPER
SALE
Sug. Retail: $4,469
Our Price: $3,379
NEW ST YLE!
Our Biggest
S
a
le Emonth
BLACK Nholiday
nds
oofv.savings
0
NOVEMBER STARTS3NOW!
Baumans Gallery of Rest
3 Year Warranty
on Power (Motor Electrical)
available on a wide selection
of reclining sofas, loveseats
and recliners from
Best Home Furnishings!
Page 4
SUPER
SALE
$1139
Sug. Retail: $1,919
Our Price: $1,439
SUPER
SALE
$689
Sug. Retail: $1,159
Our Price: $869
Our Biggest Holiday
Month of Savings Is
Undwerway Now!
Our Best
Stearns & Foster
Queen Set
$2699
Starting at
$2499!
See store for
details!
SUPER
SALE
$1429
Sug. Retail: $2,459
Our Price: $1,839
Take Advantage
of Huge
Discounts on
All In-stock
Mattresses to
Make Room for
Our New Lines!
Twin starting at $199
Full starting at $299
SPECIAL!
Upgrade from Mattress Set
to a Full Motion Queen Base
Queen starting at $399
.
Starting at $699
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)
ECRWSS
Page 3
12
CHRISTMAS PARADE
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, November 21, 2024
Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce
Ho
Ho
1×4
3×5
Dutch Country
ACR
Order your Thanksgiving meals today!
Includes turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy,
dressing, green beans, dinner rolls and pie
Hope
2 meals: ………… $39.49 (2 slices pie)
4 meals: …………$76.99 (1 whole pie)
8 meals: ………$153.98 (2 whole pies)
12 meals: …….$230.97 (3 whole pies)
to see you
at the Parade!
Be Jolly and
Shop Local on
Small Business Saturday
(785) 448-3121
112 W. 6th Ave. Garnett
Call in your order today (785) 448-5711 ext. 1 Deadline Sat., Nov. 23, 2:30 p.m.
Order your Thanksgiving Meals
Dutch Country
Cafe
t
o
d
a
y
!
!
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
Banque t Facilitie s Mee ting Rooms Catering
Includes: TurkBreakfast
ey, Mashed PoBuffet
tatoes, G7:30-11:30
ravy, Dressing,
Saturday
Green Beans, Dinner Rolls, and Pie
2 Meals. $39.49 (2 slices pie)
4 Meals(785)242-3723
. $76.99 (1 whole pie)
8 Meals. $153.98 (2 whole pies)
12 Meals $230.97 (3 whole pies)
2×3
Arnolds
Greenhouse
Call in your order today!! (785) 448-5711 ext. 1
Deadline: Saturday, November 23rd (2:30 p.m.)
ide
w
e
u
r
St o a l s t h r !
i
s
spe c r is t m a
Ch
Have fun at the
Garnett Christmas Parade
and always shop our
local businesses first.
2×2
GSSB
Memory Lane
2×4
Christmas
Tree Farm
Memory making
Lane
Celebrating
memories!
Christmas Tree Farm
Friday, Nov. 29 10-5
Saturday, Nov 30 10-5
Sunday Dec 1 12-5
(limited supply of choose & cut)
Drive-thru
Light Display
Thanksgiving
Nov. 28 5:30-9
Nov. 29, 30, Dec 1 5:30-9
We
support
From Garnett:
Hwy. 59 north to John Brown Rd., at Princeton, go east
8 miles to Vermont Rd., then 2 miles north of Rantoul.
Weather updates 1-800-296-6745 www.pleasantridge.com
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
MEMBER FDIC
Kick off this years Christmas magic and support
local merchants at Saturdays GACC Christmas Parade!
Tom
2×2 Adams
Construction
Tom Adams
Come enjoy the
Christmas Parade and
Shop Local for
Small Business Saturday!
2×2 Farmers
State Bank
(785) 448-3997
Residential Commercial Municipal
Take the family to the Garnett Christmas
Parade and shop local this holiday season!
Dont miss one of Garnetts
oldest traditions…
The Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce
Christmas Parade!
2×2
D&M Mini Barn
(785) 504-9625
24751 N Highway 169, Garnett
www.dmminibarns.com
Open
2×2 Access
SEKMHC
Where: 519 South Elm, Garnett, KS
When: Wednesdays from 4 p.m. – 8 p.m.
Thursdays from 8 a.m. – 12 p.m.
Who:
First come, rst served
On Wednesdays: Established or non-established clients for therapy
Established clients only for medication management (ages 5+)
On Thursdays: New clients for intake services only
Management and Therapy services
SERVICES PROVIDED Medication
www.sekmhc.org | (785) 448-6806
www.fsbkansas.com
2×2
Agency West
Courtney Tucker, Agent
courtney.tucker@agencywestins.com
415 S. Oak St. Garnett (785) 448-2284
Courtney Tucker, agent
2×2
Yutzy
Well see you
at the
Parade!
www.yutzyconstruction.com
1-800-823-8609
Come enjoy the beauty of the
Garnett Christmas Parade.
2×2
Make it a family tradition and
Burns
Dental
Always support
our ocal businesses.
Burns Dental Lab
Don and Siobhan White
105 W. 4th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-5543
2×2 Parkview
Heights

