Anderson County Review — November 3, 2015
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from November 3, 2015. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
November 3, 2015
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Contents Copyright 2015 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
ACHS volleyball
falls in two at
state tournament.
LEGALIZE HEMP
IN KANSAS.
See editorial page 4A.
See page 6A.
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Veterans Day events ahead
Post renaming planned,
World War II vets honored
and books released 11/11
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Annual Veterans Day
ceremonies will take a bittersweet
tone this year, with the renaming
of the local VFW post after an Army
sergeant killed in Afghanistan in
2007 and recognition of the countys few remaining World War II
veterans.
Veterans Day ceremonies will
begin at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday,
Nov. 11, at the Anderson County
Jr./Sr. High School in Garnett. All
World War II veterans are asked to
sit together, front row center, and
stand as a group
for introductions
during the ceremony.
The Veterans
Day program will
feature a renaming
ceremony
for the Garnett
Mersman
VFW Post, which
is now named
the Sergeant Jeffery Mersman
Veterans of Foreign Wars Memorial
Post No. 6397. Immediate Past
State of Kansas Veterans of Foreign
Wars Commander Bruce Fishbach
will retire the current post flag and
dedicate the new post flag.
Mersman was killed Nov. 9, 2007,
when his six-member troop detachment was ambushed in Aranus,
Afghanistan. The only survivor of
the troop later was awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor for
his actions during the ambush.
Mersman, an Anderson County
native and 2002 graduate of Prairie
View High School, enlisted in the
Army during his senior year. He
served four tours of duty in Iraq
and one in Afghanistan.
VFW leaders said the post
was named in Mersmans honor
because he was the only member of
Post No. 6397 to have died in combat
while a member of the post, and
because members wanted to commemorate the latest generation of
sacrifices of the veterans from Iraq
and Afghanistan. His death was the
first military combat death from
Anderson County in three decades.
SEE VETERANS ON PAGE 4A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-3-2015 / Vickie Moss
Firefighters and emergency personnel work the scene of a rollover accident at about 5
p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29, at U.S. 169 and 2000 Road. Cora Brown, 36, Greeley, southbound on 169 when her vehicle drifted right; she overcorrected, left the roadway and
struck a ditch. The vehicle rolled multiple times before landing on its roof about 208
feet from initial impact. Brown was injured and taken to Anderson County Hospital by
ambulance, and transported to another hospital by air ambulance.
Halloween Parade
County seeks help to
value ethanol plant
its new renewable diesel facilIndependent appraiser ity
which is presently under
construction. But because there
asked to help county
are only 12 ethanol plants in
Kansas, the state doesnt have a
determine fair value
standardized method for assess-
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – An independent
appraiser is expected to help
Anderson County and East
Kansas Agri-Energy ethanol
plant officials evaluate a tax
value that is fair to both the ethanol company and taxpayers.
With a 10-year tax abatement
on the ethanol plant expiring
this year, Anderson County
Appraiser Steve Markhams
office is faced with the daunting task of assigning a property
value to the ethanol plant and
From
left,
kindergarteners Jeremiah Finney, Chase
McClain, and Kali Johnson show
off their costumes.
ing their value. Each of the
plants vary in size and volume
or even type of materials used
to produce fuel, making it even
more difficult to determine how
to set their value for tax purposes.
We want to make sure we
have correct values that are fair
to their (EKAEs) business concerns as well as fair to county
taxpayers, Markham said.
The job of the county
appraiser is to determine the
fair market value of a propSEE PLANT ON PAGE 4A
City takes another look
at crosswalk plans
Grant opportunity
too good to pass up as
discussion continues
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Despite plans to
wait and see if drivers behave
at a crosswalk on Park Road,
city leaders will take a chance
and apply for a grant that could
install new traffic signals in the
area.
Garnett commissioners have
spent much of the past three
months discussing safety concerns at the Prairie Spirit Rail
Trail crosswalk on Park Road.
The trail is the primary southern route for children who walk
home from Garnett Elementary
School in the northernmost
part of the city. Recently, the
city received complaints that
motorists rarely stop for children or others in the crosswalk,
and speed through the area.
Garnett Chief Kevin Pekarek
said there have been no accidents and few close calls, but
agreed that police will more
closely monitor the area to
encourage people to pay attention and slow down.
SEE CROSSWALK ON PAGE 4A
Lake road dangers could
put events in jeopardy
Third grader Emma Struttman
looked sweet as cotton candy.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-3-2015 / Vickie Moss
Above, Avery Coyer, a second grader in Mrs. Durands class at
Garnett Elementary School, is on the job as a police officer with
her trusty K-9 companion during the schools annual Halloween
Parade through downtown Garnett Thursday, Oct. 29.
At left, this years costumes varied from pop culture icons like
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to Mario Brothers video game
characters, as well as spooky favorites like clowns and wolves.
Lake Garnett revival
participants concerned
about road surface
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – While basking in
the glow of another successful Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Revival last month, city leaders
acknowledged the condition of
the lake road could threaten
future events.
Organizers of the racing
revival event, which was Oct.
9-11, told city leaders they were
pleased with this years event
but expressed concerns about
the road surface. In many
places, particularly near the
entrance to the Garnett golf
course, the asphalt surface is
SEE ROAD ON PAGE 3B
Glossy 4 color printing – brochures, flyers, booklets, magazines. Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
AFTER-PROM MEETING
Attention ACHS Junior Class
Parents! The next After-Prom parents meeting will be held Monday,
Nov. 16, at 6:00 pm in Rm 101 at
ACHS. Major decision-making will
take place regarding after-prom at
Paradise Park. Please attend this
meeting and bring your ideas and
suggestions.
WOMENS BAZAAR
The United Methodist Womens
Bazaar, at Second and Oak
streets, will be from 8 a.m. to
7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov.3, and will
feature delicious casseroles,
homemade baked food, stocking
stuffers, handmade crafts and a
flea market.
VENDORS SOUGHT
The Annual Holiday Boutique will
be on Sunday, December 6, at
Prairie Belles from 12-3 p.m. This
event will be held in conjunction
with the Librarys Holiday Homes
Tour. Any vendor interested in
registering a booth for this event,
please contact Helen at (785)
448-8745.
REVIEW 150TH PROGRAM
The Anderson County Review
has compiled a special program
available to local clubs and organizations on the newspapers history in honor of our 150th anniversary celebration this year. The
45- minute program includes
displays of various newspapers
in the Reviews lineage, a short
video presentation on Antebellum
newspapers and an address by
Review publisher Dane Hicks. To
schedule the program contact the
Review at (785) 448-3121.
VETERANS BOOK HERE NOV. 11
Portraits of Honor, the veterans
book published by The Anderson
County Review in celebration of
the papers 150th anniversary
this year, will be available starting
Wednesday, Nov. 11, at our offices at 112 W. 6th in Garnett. Preordered books will be available for
pickup from 8 a.m-12 noon and
from 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Books may
also be shipped to locations in the
U.S. for an additional charge of
$5. A limited number of additional
copies will be available for purchase for $39.95 plus local sales
tax. For more information contact
the Review at (785) 448-3121 or
(800) 683-4505.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month from 1-2
p.m. at the Garnett Recreation
Center. For more information, call
Phyllis at ECKAAA, (800) 6335621.
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS OCT. 19
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on October 19, 2015 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
and Dan Harden, BG Consultants
met with the commission. Lester
reported he has recieved a second notice from CenturyLink for
damage to their lines in the county
right of ways. He has gone out
and looked at some of their equipment locations and has not found
one yet that is visibly marked.
He has informed CenturyLink he
will not pay their claims. Dan
presented a list of manufacturers
who can erect metal buildings and
contractors for the construction.
Discussion was held on sending
out bid sheets.
Appraiser
Steve Markham, Appraiser met
with the commission. He reported
the application for a fee appraiser
to value the ethanol plant has
been sent to the state.
Historical Society
Richard Miller, Anderson
County Historical Society met with
the commission. He has looked
at the furniture that the appraisers
office will be replacing. The historical society would be interested
in the smaller table. The commission offered the road department
for assistance in moving the table.
Rural Fire
Mick Brinkmeyer, Rural Fire
Director met with the commission.
He has given the commission
copies of a revised city/county
agreement. He questioned if the
commission had time to review
it. Mick informed the commission
they are looking at building a new
station for rural Garnett in the near
future.
Sheriff
Sheriff Valentine met with the
commission. He would like to
purchase a new Tahoe out of the
Hwy Patrol Partners program. He
has a couple of vehicles that were
purchased from state surplus that
need to be replaced. Commission
request he bring some figures to
look at.
Phone System
Steve Prasko, Advantage
Computers met with the commission. Steve has looked at options
for a system for the Sheriff/Jail/
Dispatch and also one for the
courthouse. The commission
feel the courthouse should wait
until a final decision has been
made on the improvements.
Sheriff Valentine was also present
and stated his system has to be
upgraded before the New Gen
is installed around the middle of
December. Steve will prepare a
quote for the sheriffs office for a
new phone system.
County Counselor
James Campbell, County
Counselor and Lester Welsh,
Road Supervisor met with the
commission. Review of the bill
Have you been diagnosed with
Non-Hodgkins
Lymphoma?
If you have been diagnosed with a
serious medical condition, such as
Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma, after exposure to
from B&B Construction Co was
held.
Meeting adjourned at 12:08 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
October 20, Terry Joe Potter To
Leisa M Price, South 72 Of East
12 Lot 19 & South 72 Lot 20 All In
Blk 7 Chapmans Addition To City
Of Garnett;
October 20, Connie I Ryan,
Randall Ryan To Carol Kesner,
Lots 5 & 6 Blk 4 Town Of Welda;
October 20, Connie I Ryan,
Randall Ryan To John L Schuster,
Peggy A Schuster, Lots 7, 8 & 9
Blk 4 Town Of Welda;
October 21, Robert J Petroskey,
Margaret E Petroskey To Cody
Church, Beg At Necor Nw4 3-2021, Thence South 04322 East
Along East Line Of Said Nw4, 575
Feet, Thence South 893728
West 335 Feet, Thence North
04322 West 575 Feet To North
Line Of Said Nw4, Thence Along
Said North Line, North 893728
East 335 Feet To Pob;
October 22, Lola M Bailey, Joe
J Bailey To Lola M Bailey, All That
Part Of E2 Ne4 Nw4 12-21-19,
That Lies West Of County Road
As Now Established; And Also,
Beg At Pt 2325 Feet East And
1484 Feet South Of Nwcor Ne4
12-21-19, Thence South 1078
Feet, Thence West 1267 Feet,
Thence North 5230 East For 212
Feet, Thence North 2830 West
For 298 Feet, Thence North 15
East For 171 Feet, Thence South
78 East For 506 Feet, Thence
North 4554 East For 980 Feet To
Pob;
October 23, Carol Kisner, Carol
Kesner A/K/A To Carol Kisner,
Lots 5 & 6 Blk 4 Town Of Welda;
October 23, Eileen Sandburg,
Eileen Lohrengel F/K/A, Mark
Sandberg To Everett J Grant, Lots
1, 2 & 3 Blk 7 Baileys Orchard
Park Addition (REV 1978) To City
Of Garnett; & South 14 Lot 4 &
South 14 Of West 27 Lot 5 Blk
7 Baileys Orchard Park Addition
(REV 1978) To City Of Garnett;
October 23, Joseph J Bailey
Jr, Sharon Bailey To Everett J
Grant, Lots 1, 2 & 3 Blk 7 Baileys
Orchard Park Addition (REV
1978) To City Of Garnett; & South
14 Lot 4 & South 14 Of West 27
Lot 5 Blk 7 Baileys Orchard Park
Addition (REV 1978) To City Of
Garnett;
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Clark Tucker vs. Brenda Sue
Long, et al, petition for protection
from abuse.
Shannon S. Sells vs. Richard
G. Sells, petition for divorce.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Kayla Hubbard, et al, vs.
Sherry Ferguson, protection from
stalking. Dismissed.
Amy Lynn Burnett, et al, vs.
Michael Keith Burnett. Dismissed.
Kayla Hubbard, et al, vs.
Earnest C. Ferguson, protection
from stalking. Dismissed.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Leiszler Oil Company vs.
Russell Earl Prater, asking for
$833.19 plus costs and interest.
Leiszler Oil Company vs. Sonya
McCarthy, asking for $846.91 plus
costs and interest.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Portfolio Recovery Association
LLC vs. Steven Leng Her, judgment for $1,490.67 plus costs and
interest.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Austin L. Wynn, possession of
drugs.
Kaitlyn M. Foshag, possession
of drugs.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
State of Kansas vs. Daniel Todd
Vannorman, drug possession,
two-counts of theft. Dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Jason
Kethal Hermreck, interference with
law officer, speeding. Dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Harley
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criminal damage to property. $243
fine.
Elena De-Rodrigues Abonza,
child passenger safety violation.
Fined $60, $30 suspended.
Alberta Jane Bishop, Speeding
36 mph in 20 mph school zone.
$310 fine.
Tamara M Boyles, no drivers
license in possession. $150 fine.
Connie J. Edgerton, speeding.
$150 fine.
Timothy A. Fagg, pedestrian
under the influence of alcohol/
drugs. $250 fine.
Nancy S. Feuerborn, backing
violation. $125 fine.
Danthony P. Fredricks, unauthorized operator. $150 fine.
Danthony P. Fredricks, speeding in school zone. $250 fine.
Jeffery A. Garcia, obstruct legal
process. Fined $1,050, $250 suspended, 90 days jail suspended.
Ryan N Gettler, speeding 49
mph in 30 mph zone. $180 fine.
Jessica Lynn Hallermann,
speeding 41 mph in the 30 mph
zone. $150 fine.
John Heiman, speeding 30 mph
in 20 mph school zone. $200 fine.
Richard A. Hermann, turning
signals required, failure to stop at
stop sign. $200 fine total.
Jamie Hermreck, incorrectly
overtaking on left, failure to wear
seat belt. $135 fine.
William L. Hulcy, speeding 40
mph in 30 mph zone. $125 fine.
Yussuff O. Jokomba, speeding
42 mph in 30 mph zone. $150
fine.
Cole A. Kelsey, no proof of liability insurance. $300 fine.
Cole A. Kelsey, driving while
suspended. $550 fine, 60 days
jail, 55 days suspended.
Stephen M Konkel, speeding 43
mph in 30 mph zone. $150 fine.
Jered B. Kotschwar, speeding
43 mph in 30 mph zone. $150
fine.
Tyler D. Land, speeding 40 mph
in 30 mph zone. $125 fine.
Abby Knesha LeBlanc, speeding 40 mph in 30 mph zone. $310
fine.
Lee Dylan Rope, driving in
violation of restriction. $200 fine.
License suspended for 30 days.
Shawn A. McAlpine, disorderly
conduct. $150 fine. 30 days jail
suspended.
Nathaniel A. Morris, speeding
2×6
gssb
43 mph in 30 mph zone. $150
fine.
Joshua K. Pate, driving in violation of restriction. $300 fine.
License suspended for 30 days.
Eric Lee Phillips, speeding 43
mph in 30 mph zone. $150 fine.
Desine Dawn Querry, no proof
of liability insurance. $350 fine.
Desine Dawn Querry, driving
while suspended. $250 fine. 30
days jail suspended.
Sarah Marie Shields, speeding
33 mph in 20 mph school zone.
$250 fine.
Rocky L. Stephenson, disorderly conduct. $200 fine. 30 days jail
suspended.
Jacob L. Terry, seat belt
required. $10 fine.
Shawn Michael Ward, speeding
34 mph in 20 mph zone. $250
fine.
Dillon Welch, speeding 46 mph
in 30 mph zone. $180 fine.
Joseph Blake Willhite, no proof
of liability insurance. $350 fine. 60
days jail suspended.
Lachelle Lenn Winterringer,
seat belt required. $10 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On October 22, a report of
burglary and theft was made in
the 400 block of East 6th Avenue,
Garnett. A door frame was damaged/destroyed. Cash, photo,
disability paperwork, and social
security card was stolen valued at
$172.
On October 25, a report of theft
was made in the 500 block of
South Walnut Street, Garnett. Golf
club and bag were stolen valued
at $3,125.
On October 20, a report of
drug use/possession, disorderly
conduct, and interference with
law officer was made in the 200
block of Warren Street, Garnett.
Pipes with residue, pipe cleaners
with residue, and plastic baggies
with green leafy substance was
seized.
On October 19, a report of driving while suspended was made in
the 300 block of North Cleveland
Street, Garnett.
Arrests
William Thacker, Garnett, was
arrested October 14 on a warrant.
David Olser, Garnett, was
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3A
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Nicholas Crook, criminal possession of firearm. Dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Daniel Todd
Vannorman, theft, criminal damage to property. Dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Trevor D.
Young, seven-counts criminal
damage to property. Dismissed.
Anderson County Attorney
Joseph T. Daulton, Jr., 20,
Garnett, was ordered to serve
a 12 month jail sentence in the
Anderson County jail after his
probation was revoked today in
Anderson County District Court.
Daulton was convicted of Criminal
Restraint, Domestic Battery, and
Minor in Possession of Alcohol in
March, 2015. On Oct. 27 Daulton
entered a plea and was convicted
of a new felony, Criminal Threat,
which served as the basis for
his revocations. Daulton will be
sentenced on the new felony conviction on November 23, 2015,
and will remain in the Anderson
County jail to serve out his 12
month sentence on the misdemeanor convictions.
Michael S. Jones, 30, Colony,
was ordered to serve 6 months
in the Anderson County Jail after
his probation was revoked in
Anderson County District Court
Oct. 27. Jones was convicted of
DUI-1st and Domestic Battery in
December, 2013. Jones was convicted of new felony offenses in
Woodson County, KS, while on
probation, which served as the
basis for his revocations. Jones
is currently serving a prison sentence in the Kansas Department
of Corrections and will be returned
there to finish serving out his sentences.
Branden M. Dulin, 33, Garnett,
was sentenced to served 72
months in the Kansas Department
of Corrections at his sentencing
Oct. 26 in Anderson County District
Court. Dulin was sentenced to 34
months on a new conviction for
Failure to Comply with the Kansas
Offender Registration Act, and his
probation was revoked and he
was ordered to prison on two
prior cases, one for Possession
of Methamphetamine (18 months)
and another charge of Failure to
Comply with the Kansas Offender
Registration Act (20 months). The
sentences were all ordered to run
consecutively for a 72 month controlling sentence. Dulin remains in
the Anderson County Jail until he
can be transported to the Kansas
Department of Corrections to
begin serving his sentences.
Speeding violations:
Caleb Scott Barnum, $213 fine.
Jesus J. Beltran, $249 fine.
Sharyor Brannon, $240 fine.
Mallory Marie Hernandez, $213
fine.
Emilee Marie Johnson, $370
fine. Diversion granted.
Lashawn M. Jones, $444 fine.
Darci Mae Lisher, $303 fine.
Vicky Jean Portwood, $153
fine.
Michael Smith, $153 fine.
David Robert Wirth, $171 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Andrew William Benjamin, $10
fine.
Zachary A. Cole, $10 fine.
Jessica C. Pritchett, $10 fine.
Other:
Andrew William Benjamin,
defective brakes. $153 fine.
Clayton Carother, over weight
limits on axles and wheels. $298
fine.
Kenneth R. Cartwright, possession of drugs. No penalty listed.
Joseph T. Daulton, criminal
threat. No penalty listed.
Jason Kethal Hermreck, criminal damage to property. No penalty listed.
Jessica C. Pritchett, child passenger safety violation. $168 fine.
Daniel Todd Vannorman, twocounts burglary, drug possession.
No penalty listed.
Trevor D. Young, two-counts
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
BOWEN
OCTOBER 8, 1951-OCTOBER 24, 2015
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2A
arrested October 14 on suspicion
of disorderly conduct.
Marrisa Bond, Ottawa, was
arrested October 16. No cause
listed.
Bridgette Anderson, Garnett,
was arrested October 19 on suspicion of driving while suspended.
Tyler Meeker, Lawrence, was
arrested October 20 on a warrant.
Cheryl Hamilton, Garnett, was
arrested October 20 on a warrant.
Timothy Fagg, Garnett, was
arrested October 20 on suspicion
of drug use/possession, disorderly
conduct, interference with law officer.
Joseph Siebers, Gladstone MO,
was arrested October 21 on suspicion of two-counts of theft.
Sean Hutchinson, Garnett, was
arrested October 23 on suspicion
of driving while suspended.
Robert Brady, Ottawa, was
arrested October 24 on suspicion
of driving while suspended.
AUGUST 15, 1926-OCTOBER 28, 2015
Patrick Bryant, Garnett, was
Luther Willard Justice, age and Dean Justice; sister, Nettie arrested October 25 on a warrant
89, of Garnett, died Wednesday, Weixeldorfer; stepson, Mike and suspicion of drugs and drug
paraphernalia.
October 28, 2015, at Golden Mader; and a step grandson.
Heights in Garnett.
Survivors include his son, ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
He was born on August 15, Charles Justice of St. Joseph,
REPORT
1926, at South Park, Kansas, Missouri; two grandchildren;
Accidents
to Emmitt Justice and Mary four great grandchildren; stepOn October 13, Zachary Charles
son, Tom Mader of Edgerton; Wilper over corrected to avoid a
(Button) Justice.
He was a World War II four stepdaughters, Vickie deer and the vehicle came to rest
Veteran, serving in the U.S. Guilfoyle of Parker; Helen in the ditch on Trego Road near
Norman of Garnett; Angie Highway 169. No injuries reported.
Army from 1944 to 1946.
He married Ruby Benskin Chitwood of Garnett; and
On October 20, Gregory James
January 17, 1947 at Kansas Jeanine Stifter of Greeley; 12 Perry swerved to miss a deer on
City, Kansas. She preceded him step-grandchildren and 17 1000 Road near Iowa Road and
lost control. The vehicle rolled onto
in death in 1979. He married step-great-grandchildren.
Florence Mader January 5,
Funeral services were its left side in the ditch. No injuries
1987.
Saturday, October 31, 2015, at reported.
He was preceded in death the Feuerborn Family Funeral
JAIL LOG
by his parents; daughter, Rita Service Chapel in Garnett,
Alex Stefan Hall, 23, Baldwin,
Marie Justice; his wife, Ruby; Kansas. Burial followed in was booked into jail October 22 by
his wife, Florence in 2013; two the Holy Angels Cemetery in Douglas County Sheriff on suspicion of obstructing legal process,
brothers, Robert Bo Justice Garnett.
DUI, transporting an open container, reckless driving, refusal to
submit to test, fleeing a law officer.
Bond set at $2,850.
JANUARY 3, 1936-OCTOBER 28, 2015
Dustin Allen Kluge, 26, Edgerton,
Earl Gene Roberts, age 79,
Survivors incldue his wife, was booked into jail October 22 by
of Greeley, died Wednesday, Charlotte Roberts, of the home; Miami County Sheriff on a warrant.
October 28, 2015, at the two sons, Randy Earl Roberts Not bondable. Released October
Anderson County Hospital in of Pittsburg; Danny Roberts of 28.
Kristen Lee Parrish, 34,
Garnett.
Garnett; two daughters, Renee
He was born on January 3, Pagenkopf of Cumming, Ga.; Wimington NC, was booked
1936, at Humboldt, to Lester Jana Boyt of Gardner; 10 grand- into jail October 23 by Anderson
County Sheriff on suspicion of disEarl and Creola (Wemmer)
children; and 10 great grand- orderly conduct, battery of law offiRoberts.
cer. Bond set at $1,500. Released
He married Charlotte Carr children.
October 23.
Funeral
services
were
on September 9, 1954, at Bush
Jason Andrew Allen, 37,
Saturday,
October
31,
2015,
at
City.
Lawrence, was booked into jail by
He was preceded in death the Feuerborn Family Funeral Douglas County Sheriff on suspiby his parents; brother, Harold Service Chapel in Garnett, cion of failure to appear, theft by
Roberts; and sister, Delma Kansas. Burial followed in the deception. No bonds listed.
Boyce.
Kincaid Cemetery.
David James Hill, 60, Paola,
was booked into jail October 23
by Miami County Sheriff on suspicion of criminal damage to property. Bond set at $1,500. Released
October 28.
Craig Burton Allen, 31, Paola,
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
two (2) art galleries.
was booked into jail October 23
Tuesday, November 3, 2015)
A meeting regarding the proposed project by Miami County Sheriff on probawill be held on November 24, 2015 at 6:00 tion violation, failure to register as
p.m. at the regular meeting of the Garnett City offender. Bond set at $25,000.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING
Chad Jerome Roy, 43, no
The City of Garnett has filed a pre-applica- Commission; Garnett City Hall, 131 West Fifth
address,
was booked into jail
tion with the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Avenue; Garnett, Kansas.
October 23 by Miami County
Rural Development, for financial assistance to
The public is invited to attend this meeting Sheriff on a warrant. Not bondable.
help replace fluorescent lighting in the Garnett and to provide comments on the proposed proj- Released October 28.
ect.
Public Library building.
Jeremy Lee Spurlock, 29,
The area to be served by the proposed
Joyce E. Martin, City Manager Gardner, was booked into jail
project is the main library, childrens section and
nv3t1 October 23 by Miami County
Sheriff on a warrant. Not bondable.
Dustin Cody Gould, 23,
Louisburg, was booked into jail
October 23 by Miami county sheriff
on suspicion of driving while suspended and a warrant. Bond set at
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
will be for capital funds to help provide transpor- $1,000.
Tuesday, November 3, 2015)
tation services in the area.
Written comments and questions in regards
Public Notice for Operating/Capital Assistance to this application are encouraged and will
be accepted until 4:00 p.m. on November 16,
Tri-Ko, Inc. is submitting an application 2015. Comments can be sent to: John Platt, (Published in The Anderson County Review,
for U.S.C. 49-5310 federal capital and operat- Executive Director at Tri-Ko, Inc., 301 First St.,
Nov. 3, 2015)
ing funds to be provided through the Kansas Osawatomie, Kansas 66064.
Department of Transportation. The application
nv3t1
RESOLUTION No. 2015,1026:01
Chris Edward Bowen, age
64, of Garnett, died Saturday,
October 24, 2015, at his home,
where he had been battling cancer since March.
He was born to A. Darlene
South and Hansford Johnson
Bo Bowen, in Garnett on
October 8, 1951.
He married Diana Williams
February 13, 1976.
He was preceded in death
by his parents; his sister, Kay
Moyer; and his granddaughter,
Alexis Allyn Bowen.
Survivors include his wife,
Diana, of the home; sons,
Michael Eric Bowen and
Christepher Bowen; daughter,
Amanda Burk; his pride and
joy grandchildren, Destiny and
Andy Seuell, Bryce, Michael,
Corey, Harley, Lars, and
Addyson Bowen, Rudy Parker
and Kaylie, Nathan and Avery
Burk; and the apple of his eye,
great granddaughter, Livianne
Seuell; two brothers, Hansford
Eugene Bowen of Milton,
Florida; Robert Lee Bowen
and wife Victoria of Palmdale,
California; aunts, uncles, nephews, nieces, and cousins.
Funeral services were
Friday, October 30, 2015, at
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel in Garnett, with
burial following in the Welda
Cemetery, Welda.
JUSTICE
ROBERTS
Notice of public meeting
Notice about Tri-Ko funds
Notice to amend budget
Sean Patrick Hutchinson, 23,
Garnett, was booked into jail
October 23 by Garnett Police on
suspicion of driving while suspended. Bond set at $500. Released
October 23.
Robert Lee Brady, 21, Ottawa,
was booked into jail October 23
by Garnett Police on suspicion of
driving while suspended. Bond set
at $1,000. Released October 25.
Patrick Wayne Bryant, 32,
Garnett, was booked into jail
October 25 by Garnett Police on
suspicion of drug possession and
drug paraphernalia. Released on
own recognits October 25.
Gloria Souza, 56, Lawrence,
was booked into jail October 27 by
Douglas County Sheriff on suspicion of DUI. No bond listed.
Courtney Eugene Austin, 33,
Lawrence, was booked into jail
October 27 by Douglas County
Sheriff on suspicion of protective
order violation, aggravated battery.
No bond listed.
Brandon Riley Smith, 30,
Lawrence, was booked into jail by
Douglas County Sheriff for failure
to appear. No bond listed.
Marcus Antonio Phillips, 24,
Lawrence, was booked into jail by
Douglas County Sheriff for failure
to appear. No bond listed.
JAIL ROSTER
Herbert Hayden was booked
into jail June 11 for Anderson
County, bond set at $30,000.
Branden Dulin was booked into
jail June 25 for Anderson County,
bond set at $30,000.
John Miller was booked into jail
July 9 for Anderson County, bond
set at $1,000.
Jason Hermreck was booked
into jail August 11 for Anderson
County, bond set at $35,000.
Joseph Daulton was booked
into jail August15 for Anderson
County, bond set at $15,000.
Yates Rosendahl was booked
into jail August 27 for Anderson
County, bond set at $2,500.
Charles Steele was booked
into jail August 26 for Anderson
County, bond set at $2,500.
Michael Kinder was booked
into jail August 15 for Anderson
County, bond set at $19,000.
Nathanael Talbert was booked
into jail August 28 for Anderson
County, bond set at $100,000.
Michael SpellMeier was booked
into jail May 21 for Anderson
County, bond set at $250,000.
Harley Crook was booked into
jail September21 for Anderson
County. No bond details.
Notice to quiet title
(Published in The Anderson County Review
Tuesday, October 20, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
Case No. 15CV45
JAMES A. BRADSHAW, Plaintiff,
vs.
ONE 1992 GEO TRACKER, VIN
2CNBJ18U0N6919929; JOHN HUGHES;
TAMMY S. HUGHES; ANY AND ALL
UNKNOWN OWNERS OF SAID 1992 GEO
TRACKER; THE STATE OF KANSAS,
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, DIVISION OF
MOTOR VEHICLES;
THE STATE OF KANSAS, KANSAS HIGHWAY
PATROL; and the unknown heirs, executors,
administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and
assigns of a person alleged to be deceased; the
unknown spouse of a defendant; the unknown
officers, successors, trustees, creditors and
assigns of a defendant that is an existing,
dissolved or dormant corporation; the unknown
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
creditors, successors and assigns of a defendant that is or was in partnership; and the
unknown guardians, conservators and trustees
of a defendant that is a minor or is under any
legal disability, Defendants.
Pursuant to K.SA. Chap. 60
NOTICE OF SUIT
THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the abovenamed defendants:
You are notified that a Petition has been
filed in the District Court of Anderson County,
Kansas, praying to quiet title on the above-captioned vehicle.
All defendants are required to plead to the
Petition on or before the 30th day of November,
2015, at 1:30 p.m., in the District Court of
Anderson County, Kansas, 100 E. 4th Street,
Garnett, Kansas. If you fail to plead, the Petition
will be taken as true, and judgment and decree
will be rendered accordingly upon said Petition.
/s/ William E. Bayne
William Edward Bayne #18505
Wm Bayne, L.L.C.
P.O. Box 412
Williamsburg KS 66095
(785) 746-1900 (voice & fax)
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF
oc20t3
Notice to settle
Cartwright estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday October 27, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
ROBERT L. CARTWRIGHT,a/k/a
ROBERT CARTWRIGHT,
Deceased.
Case No. 15-PR-22
NOTICE OF HEARING
said petition and of all other Kansas real estate
and all personal property owned by the decedent at the time of his death and that the estate
be assigned in accordance withe the laws of
intestate succession.
You are required to file your written
defenses thereto on or before the 23rd day of
November, 2015, at 9:00 a.m. in the District
Court, Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas, at
which time and place the cause will be heard.
Should you fail therein, judgment and decree
will be entered in due course upon the petition.
KENNETH R. CARTWRIGHT
Petitioner
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
Terry J. Solander #07280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
You are hereby notified that a petition
has been filed in this court by Kenneth R.
Cartwright, one of the heirs at law of Robert L.
Cartwright, a/k/a Robert Cartwright, deceased,,
praying that descent be determined of deceFARM-INS
dents interest in certain Anderson County,
Rachael Hampton was booked Kansas, real estate particularly described in
into jail September 18 for Douglas
County.
Caleb Mendez was booked into
jail October 7 for Douglas County.
Dale Baker was booked into jail
October 7 for Douglas County.
Jason Ridenour was booked into
jail October 7 for Miami County.
Zakary Blackketter was booked
into jail October 21 for Miami
County.
Tino White was booked into jail
October 9 for Douglas County.
Courtney Austin was booked
into jail October 16 for Douglas
County.
Michael Eller was booked into
jail October 21 for Miami County.
Jeremy Cline was booked into
jail October 16 for Douglas County.
Alex Hall was booked into jail
October 22 for Douglas County.
Craig Allen was booked into jail
October 23 for Miami County.
Notice to rezone ag land
A RESOLUTION APPROVING ZONE
CHANGE APPLICATION #ZC2015-05
(STANLEY) TO REZONE 7.62-ACRES FROM
A-1 AGRICULTURE DISTRICT TO R-E
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
cy is seeking Kansas Disadvantaged Business
RESIDENTIAL ESTATE DISTRICT.
Enterprise (DBE) certified companies as potenTuesday, November 3, 2015)
tial vendors for these services. Please contact
WHEREAS, Anderson County, Kansas is a
Tri-Ko, Inc. receives Federal Transit Devon Powell at 913-755-3025 if you are a DBE
county municipal government with the authority
Administration (FTA) operating dollars. This or are interested learning more about the DBE
to adopt zoning regulations and create zonfunding is utilized for the purchase of fuel, insur- program.
ing district boundaries as provided in Section
ance, and equipment maintenance. This agennv3t1
15-753 K.S.A.; and
WHEREAS, the County did adopt
Resolution NO. 00, 0911.1 in September 2000,
establishing zoning regulations for the unincorporated areas of Anderson County; and
WHEREAS,
the Anderson County
(Published in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, November 3, 2015)
Planning Commission did hold a Public hearing
on October 19, 2015 to consider Zone Change
Application #ZC2015-05 (Stanley) to rezone
7.62 acres from A-1Agriculture District to R-E
Residential Estate District.
WHEREAS, the Planning Commission, after
reviewing and considering all written and oral
testimony, did unanimously approve said zone
change request, and recommends that the
Board of County Commissioners adopt Zone
Change Application #ZC2015-05 (Stanley); and
WHEREAS, the Board of County
Commissioners, after duly reviewing the recommendation of the Planning Commission
and considering all comments for and against
said zone change, finds that the rezoning of
nv3t1 7.62-acres from A-1 Agriculture District to
R-E Residential Estate District in substantial compliance with the intent of the County
Notice about transport services
3A
REMEMBRANCES
Comprehensive Plan and the public interest.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED,
that the Anderson County Board of County
Commissioners does hereby approve Zone
Change Application #ZC2015-05 (Stanley), said
property is located in Section 3, Township 21
South, Range 21 East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, Anderson County, Kansas.
PASSED AND ADOPTED THIS 26TH DAY
OF OCTOBER, 2015.
This action shall take effect upon publication
in the official County newspaper.
/s/ Jerry Howarter, Chairman
/s/ Eugene Highberger, Commissioner
/s/ Leslie D. McGhee, Commissioner
ATTEST:
/s/ Phyllis Gettler, Clerk
EXHIBIT A
All that part of the North Half of the
Northeast Fraction Quarter Section 3, Township
21 South, Range 21 East, Anderson County,
Kansas, described as follows; Commencing at
the Northeast corner of the Northeast Fractional
Quarter of said Section 3; thence S881053W,
along the North line of the Northeast Quarter of
said Section 3, a distance of 755.00 feet, to the
Point of Beginning; thence S20706E, a distance of 576.01 feet; thence S881053W, parallel to the North line of the Northeast Quarter of
said Section 3, a distance of 576.00 feet; thence
N20706W, a distance of 576.01 feet, to a point
on the North line of the Northeast Quarter of
said Section 3; thence N881053E, along said
North line, a distance of 576.00 feet, to the Point
of Beginning, Containing 7.62 acres more or
less, subject to any part thereof in roads.
nv3t1
oc27t3
Notice to settle Yoder estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, November 3, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
ORA W. YODER, Deceased
Case No. 15-PR-23
NOTICE OF HEARING
owned by the decedent at the time of his death
and that the estate be assigned in accordance
with the laws of intestate succession.
You are required to file your written defenses
thereto on or before the 30th day of November,
2015, at 9:00 a.m. in the District Court, Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the petition.
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition
has been filed in this court by Vera Irene
Borntrager, one of the heirs at law of Ora
W. Yoder, deceased, praying that descent be
determined of decedents interest in certain
Anderson County, Kansas, real estate particularly described in said petition and of all other
Kansas real estate and all personal property
VERA IRENE BORNTRAGER
Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #07280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
nv3t3
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Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
EDITORIAL
Legalize hemp in Kansas
It helped us win our war for independence.
Its name is immortalized in an early
Civil War battle fought nearby.
It saved the life of a future American
president.
Its versatile and eco-friendly.
Industrial hemp.
Section 7606 of the 2013 Farm Bill
authorized states legalizing the plant
to begin research and pilot programs
through state agriculture departments
and institutions of higher learning.
Rep. Willie Dove of Bonner Springs will
re-introduce legislation early next year
legalizing industrial hemp so Kansas can
join the 24 other states adding the plant
to their agricultural economies.
First, a myth to de-bunk: hemp is not
marijuana.
A quick review of your class in botany:
Each plant is a variant of the genus
Cannabis; the only plant genus that contains the unique classes of molecular
compounds called cannabinoids. The
two major cannabinoids are THC and
CDB. Marijuana has high levels of the
psychoactive THC, and low levels of the
non-psychoactive CDB. Industrial hemp
is just the opposite. In fact, if the two
plants cross-pollinate, the CDB in industrial hemp will overwhelm the THC in its
cousin.
Section 7606 asserts industrial hemp
is distinct, and limits its THC content to
0.3%.
You couldnt get high on hemp if you
smoked an acre of it.
Additionally, to allay any law enforcement concerns, growers in other states
provide their plots GPS coordinates to
their local lawmen so that their legal
crop is not disturbed.
Here are a few of the uses of industrial hemp:
Food – The nuts, seeds and oil are
rich in fatty acids (Omega 3, 6, 9) and low
in carbs.
Building Materials – Concrete alternative, insulation, wood finishes and
deck stains.
Auto Parts – Lightweight replacements for plastic and metal-based car
components.
Clothing for the entire famly.
Biomass Fuels – Fuel pellets, liquid
fuel, gas.
Paper products of all kinds.
Body Care – Cosmetics, soaps, shampoos, lotions and creams.
Medicines – Anecdotal reports of
relief of pain, sleep disorders, indigestion, among others.
According to the Hemp Industries
Association, sales of hemp-infused products rose 21% in 2014 to $620 million.
Industrial hemp has had an important
role in American history:
Although the Declaration of
Independence was on parchment, the
first and second drafts were written on
hemp. Exports of the plant were sold to
France and weapons were bought with
the proceeds. British efforts to confiscate
weapons resulted in The Shot Heard
Round The World at Lexington and
Concord.
The Battle of the Hemp Bales, an
early victory by the South, was fought
at another Lexington, in Missouri, in
September, 1861.
CROSSWALK…
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
The webbing on the parachute used
by George H. W. Bush after his plane was
shot down in WWII was made of hemp,
as were the ropes and riggings on the
ship that plucked him out of the Pacific.
Even the future presidents shoes were
stitched with hemp fibers.
The plant is truly green. It grows
well without fungicides, pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides, and with 1/3 of
the water needed for cotton. It grows to
maturity in a fraction of the time as timber.
Hemp was outlawed in 1937, restored
as America geared up for WWII, but
banned again in 1957; victimized by others confusion of it with marijuana.
But it is making a comeback, and
Kansas needs to join with its 10 other
American siblings, including neighbors
Missouri and Nebraska, in realizing the
potential of this amazing plant. Another
dozen or so states have measures in the
legislative pipeline. All are ahead of us.
Imagine pairing the possibilities of
industrial hemp with the genius of the
Kansas farmer.
Hopefully, our local legislators will
support Doves bill when the session
begins, and bring another ag revenue
option to our community and the rest of
the state.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
I think its pathetic that a sergeant on the city
police department doesnt obey the law. This is
the third year in a row that hes failed to renew
his license tag. Why does he constantly do this?
What other laws has he decided he doesnt have
to obey? Why dont any of his fellow officers
issue him a ticket? They will definitely issue a
ticket to anyone else who doesnt have a current
tag. Grow up, be a man and start acting like a
law enforcement official. Obey our laws.
Yes, I am God. I command you to keep your properties kept up and not be a community eyesore.
I just wanted to call and thank the county
for mowing the road ditches here on 1600 and
Barton Road. It will surely help with being able
to see the deer, plus it just makes everything
absolutely beautiful.
Hey, about this whole argument in the Phone
Forum about people keeping their properties
cleaned up and their right to be pigs, etc., there
are laws on the books in both the city and the
county that have to do with proper zoning and
land use. The city has a nuisance ordinance and
the county probably has something similar. If
your neighbors insist on devaluing your property because they love living in their own filth,
the right thing to do is to contact your city police
or the sheriffs office and swear out a complaint
against them. Haul them into court and have
them explain it to the judge. Thank you.
Who are you to dictate how someone else should
live or spend their money, how they should
maintain their property or what their priorities
should be? Everyone has the right to decide
that for themselves. Who are you to determine
whether or not someone has pride? If you feel
your neighborhood looks like a slum you may be
happier living somewhere else, but you are certainly in no position to decide how those around
you should live.
Hillary: Its the sexism, stupid
It was inevitable that Bernie Sanders would
be accused of sexism sooner or later.
His day came at the signature JeffersonJackson dinner in Iowa. Hillary Clinton hit
the Vermont senator for saying in the first
Democratic debate that all the shouting in
the world wouldnt keep guns out of the
wrong hands. According to Clinton, Sanders
had directed a notoriously sexist insult at her
— although not one of the 15 million people
watching at the time had noticed it.
I havent been shouting, Clinton intoned,
but sometimes when a woman speaks out,
some people think its shouting. What
Clintons plaint lacked in plausibility, it made
up for in bad faith.
Shouting has not typically been considered
a loaded term. Sanders didnt say screeching. He didnt say nagging. In fact, he had
been saying that shouting is ineffectual in the
gun debate long before he was entangled in
an argument about gun control with Hillary
Clinton.
Nonetheless, Sanders felt compelled on the
CNN show State of the Union to tout his
record on womens issues and say, I think
what the secretary is doing there is taking
words and misapplying them. But there he
goes again — suggesting that women arent
capable of correctly applying words.
Sanders should get used to it. If he remains
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
a threat to Clinton in the early states, hell
be deemed a cross between Archie Bunker
and Andrew Dice Clay. Already, the left-wing
publication Salon ran a headline urging on the
sisterhood: Lets storm the Sanders he-man
women-haters club.
If Hillary is willing to use this tack against
Sanders, a down-the-line supporter of the feminist policy agenda, just wait until she gets into
a race with Donald Trump, Ted Cruz or any
other Republican. No microaggression will be
too micro to try to use to win a news cycle.
Hillary has already broadcast that shes
going to wield her gender as an all-purpose
PLANT…
FROM PAGE 1A
FROM PAGE 1A
Commissioners considered several alternatives,
but expressed dislike for nearly all of them. They
were against lowering the speed limit or changing
the area to a school zone. They considered installing new traffic signals or hiring a crossing guard,
but were concerned about the costs and liability.
After discussing the matter at length, they decided
the situation had improved since it was publicized
in the newspaper and wanted to wait and see if
more awareness, combined with greater enforcement of the traffic laws, was enough.
But when Anderson County Emergency
Management Director JD Mersman learned about
the situation, he told City Manager Joyce Martin
about mini-grants from the Kansas Department of
Health and Environment to improve pedestrian
safety. Mersman has been successful obtaining
multiple grants for the county, and recently said
he wanted to help the city be more aware of such
opportunities.
Martin told commissioners she plans to apply for
a grant to install a push-button traffic signal at the
crosswalk. She talked with USD 365 officials who
agreed to write letters in support of such a grant,
as well as an official with the Kansas Department
of Wildlife and Parks, which maintains the Prairie
Spirit Rail Trail. KDWP estimates about 30,000 people use the Park Road crosswalk each year for walking or biking purposes, which could make the need
for a traffic signal more appealing for the grant.
Although there is no guarantee the city will
receive such a grant, commissioners said they support Martins efforts to improve the area.
In a related note, commissioners also asked
Martin to look into trees near the area that obstruct
the vision of motorists and those who use the crosswalk. Martin said the city can ask the property
owners to trim the trees, and city staff can do so if
the property owners object.
erty as it exits on Jan. 1 of each year. The
appraisers office itself does not assign or collect taxes, but taxes are based on the value set
by the appraiser. In the past when assigning
value to the ethanol plant, based on meetings
with industry officials across the Midwest,
Markham previously looked at such things as
sales volume and cost per gallon of ethanol to
try to determine a value, but said those figures
may not accurately represent the true value of
the plant. For example, the price of ethanol can
vary greatly.
With the ending of the plants tax exemption status, its even more important to assess
a fair and equitable value, Markham said. .
Assessment procedures vary for other counties that have ethanol plants. Some have left
the matter to the Kansas Board of Tax Appeals,
letting those officials sort out the matter. At
least two have gone with an independent
appraiser, and Markham said they told him
they highly prefer that method.
There does not seem to be a standard way
of doing them, he said.
In addition to talking to appraisers who
have experience with ethanol plants, Markham
sought guidance from the states Property
Valuation Division, which supervises ad-valorem policies and procedures, conducts the
valuation of state appraised properties and
provides general property tax information.
Last
month,
Anderson
County
Commissioners approved hiring an independent appraiser to research the plant and facilitate meetings between EKAE and county officials. The application was sent to the state in
mid-October. Markham estimates the process
will move more quickly now that some of the
early administrative procedures have been
passed.
Although property values are assessed as of
Jan. 1 of each year, the process typically isnt
completed and released until June. Property
owners who disagree with the assessed value
can follow appeal procedures.
VETERANS…
FROM PAGE 1A
After the ceremony at the high school, the
VFW Ladies Auxiliary will serve lunch for $5.
Mersmans mother and father will be given a
special award during the lunch.
Later, the auxiliary will serve their annual
Chili and Soup Dinner from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
at the post.
In addition to the formal activities, The
Reviews Portraits of Honor pictorial veterans book will be released Wednesday.
The book features pictures of more than 750
Anderson County veterans since the Civil
War, as submitted by the veterans, their family members, the local historical society and
American Legion, and others. Pre-ordered
books will be available for pickup at the office
at 112 W. 6th in Garnett from 8 a.m-12 noon and
from 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Books may also be shipped
to locations in the U.S. for an additional charge
of $5. A limited number of additional copies
will be available for purchase for $39.95 plus
local sales tax.
For more information contact the Review at
(785) 448-3121 or (800) 683-4505.
argument for her candidacy. At the Democratic
debate, she said shes an outsider — because
shes a woman. She said she wouldnt simply
be the third term of Barack Obama — because
shes a woman. Hillary clearly doesnt want
anyone to be mistaken about her gender.
Hillary will need to do all she can to motivate women voters to make up for what may
well be a historic poor showing among men.
In the latest Wall Street Journal/NBC poll,
her favorable rating among white men was an
abysmal 26 percent.
Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway
says there are three positive attributes that
voters tend to attribute to women candidates:
They are warm and understanding; they are
new and fresh; they are honest. Hillary, a
partisan warrior whos been on the national
stage for decades, usually trailed by an ethical
cloud, is an imperfect vessel for all of those
qualities. Which is why shell use her gender
as a means of attack as much as a selling point.
In Iowa, she defended playing the gender
card, saying if thats what its called when
you stand up for womens rights, then deal
me in. Actually, shell be doing the dealing,
and it will be from the bottom of the deck.
Rich Lowry is editor of The National
Review.
Contact Your
Legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
email pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521. Fax: (202) 228-6966
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep. Lynn Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 225-6601
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodiacls class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
5A
LOCAL
Colony Christian Church welcomes new pastor
Calendar
Nov. 4-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement, 7
p.m.; 5-County bus to Garnett,
phone 24 hrs. before you need
a ride, 785-448-3310 any weekday; Community Church
Missionary, Church Annex,
1:30 p.m., United Methodist
Women, United Methodist
Church Fellowship Hall, 7 p.m.
4-10-Recycle trailer no /cherry St. front of City Hall area
Friday, leaves Tuesday
School Calendar
4-FCCLA
to
Burlington;
5-Middle school basketball at
Pleasanton, 5 p.m.; 7-Football
Regionals; 10-Crest School to
Bowlus, Iola.
Meal Site
6-chicken fried steak, mashed
potatoes, gravy, carrots, wheat
bread, lemon medley; 9-turkey
burger, raw veggie salad, bun,
apricots; 11-salmon patty, tomato rice soup, peaches, bread,
cookie. Phone 620-852-3450 for
meal reservations.
East Central Kansas Area
Agency on Aging is hosting several outreach events to assist
Medicare beneficiaries with
their Medicare Part D enrollment for 2016. Open enrollment
began Oct. 15 and will end Dec.
7. They are scheduled for Nov.
6 at the Colony Nutrition Site,
10-1 p.m,; phone 785-242-7200, or
800-633-5621.
Christian Church
Scripture presented at
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
Sundays service was I John
5:13. Charlie Towne brought
the sermon.
Knowing For Sure. The
congregation presented Charlie
with a gift for pastor appreciation. Nov. l-hayrack ride and
wienie roast at 3 p.m. at Kendall
McGhee farm; Nov. 8-Andrew
Zoll will bring the sermon.
Womens Celebrate Recovery
will meet 6 p.m. at the church;
Nov. 11-Working Wonders
CWC 7 p.m. at the church; Nov.
14-Harvest Feast/Baby Shower
for Genna Gallaher at the City
Hall community room, 5 p.m.
Shower suggestions- diapers,
money to put in a piggy bank,
books for babies.
UMC
Scripture presented at the
United Methodist Church service on Sunday was Psalm 126,
Job 42:1-6,10-17, Hebrews 7:2328 and Mark 10:46-52. Pastor
Dorothy Welch presented the
sermon, A Willing Spirit}.
Library Board
The regular meeting of the
Colony Library Board was held
Oct. 20. It was decided to purchase treats to give out to students at the Crest Halloween
Parade. Kloma Buckle will purchase the treats. Lola Call and
Kloma will hand out the treats.
Books added to the library in
September: The Town Tamer
by Parker Bonner, Vengeance
Trail by Bill Brook, Furnace
Flat: A Western Duo by Frank
Bonham, Sons of Fire by Max
McCoy.
Several books have been donated to the library.
Movies added to the library
in September: Furious 7 &
Furious 7 (Blu-Ray), San
Andreas & San Andreas (BluRay) and Avengeers: Age of
Ultron. Movies donated to
the library: Gold member,
Hitch, Honeymoon in Vegas,
Talladega Nights and Blue
Collar Comedy Tour
The following books are
in the SEKLS traveling
library at the Colony Library:
Nonficition-Decorating
for Christmas, Christmas
All Through the House,
Gooseberry Patch Christmas
Book 5, Christmas Stockings,
Christmas Crafting With
Kids and An Old Fashioned
Christmas.
Fiction: All is Calm, All is
Bright, Long, Tall Christmas,
Pastor Andrew Zoll is the new
pastor for the Colony Christian
Church beginning Nov. 8. He is
a graduate of Ozark Christian
College and will be coming here
from Colorado Springs, CO. He,
his wife, Rebecca, and three children, will reside at the Colony
Christian Church Parsonage,
306 N. Maple Street.
Call Me Mrs. Miracle,
Christmas
in
Mustang
Creek and Snow Angel Cove.
Children-The Money Well
Save, Merry Christmas, Splat,
Two Christmas Mice, When
Santa Fell to Earth, Christmas
City, Let It Snow, Fairy Tale
Christmas, Santa Clauses
Short Poems From the The
North Pole, Baby Touch and
Feel Christmas and Zoomers
Out-Of-This-World Christmas.
Lions
Twelve members and three
guests were in attendance at
the Oct. 21 meeting. President
Sue Colgin was in charge.
During the business meeting
it was voted to purchase a service dog and made a donation
in assistance of new fence
building at the Colony Little
League Association ball field.
A Christmas shut-in list was
passed around to members.
Donna Westerman volunteered to contact the United
Methodist Church that is planning a Christian Thanksgiving
Dinner and program. It was
decided to meet at the home
of Bill Ulrich Oct. 31 to assist
Brian Ulrich with getting wood
for Lion Bill. Also reported
was a high school student that
needs some financial help in
making a trip for which she has
been selected. More information about this will be checked
into. The next regular meeting
will be Nov. 4.
Jolly Dozen
The Jolly Dozen Club
met Oct. 19 at the City Hall
Community Room. Roll call
was telling one of your most
embarrassing
moments.
Nine members were present.
Several members were in cos-
tume. Flower barrels were discussed. The Lions Club has
purchased two new barrels
to replace two of the old barrels. Marilyn Thexton won the
hostess gift, $5.00.They played
Trick or Treat. Everyone got
a treat before they finished.
They also listened to Virginia
Dutton read a Halloween story.
The other members supplied
the sound effects. Delores
Strickler served refreshments
of angel food cake topped with
whipped cream and crushed
Butterfinger. She also served
hot cider, nuts and candy corn.
96th Birthday
Mary Deckers 96th birthday
celebration was held Oct. 25
hosted by Bonnie Rook.
Attending were: Jeff, Jacob
and Daniel Hoggatt, Wichita;
Jana Burke and David,
Manhattan; Haylee Burke,
Wichita; Garry, Paula and Luke
Decker, Welda; Paul and Cathy
Stephens and Sydney, Rick and
Connie Thompson, Kincaid;
Blake and Hannah Thompson,
Owen, Nora, Molly, Ruby,
Greta, Kincaid; Justin and Erin
Zook, Brylee, Brekyn, Britni
Zook, Garnett;Dick Crabtree,
Colony; Gary and Janet
Crabtree, Amanda, Shawnee
Mission KS and Charlie and
Betsy Stephens, Iola. Marys
birthdate is Oct. 27.
If a man dies will
he live again?
Job is one of the oldest books
in the Bible. In Job 14:14 Job
asks a very important question. If a man dies will he
live again? Each of us has
wondered when we come to the
end of our life what would happen. A person who has received
Jesus Christ as their personal Savior is secure. This is
the fundamental message of
the New Testament and this is
what is required to gain salvation. You cannot do anything to
lose you salvation because you
didnt do anything to earn it.
Some might say Ill accept
Christ but I am going to go on
living and doing what I please.
In John 3 Jesus tells Nicodemus,
No one can see the Kingdom of
God unless he is born again. If
you are born again you put off
the old things and put on the
new things. Your life changes.
If nothing changes one is left
to wonder whether Christ has
truly been received or this is a
way to justify how we are living
or what we are doing.
In John 14 Jesus introduces
something entirely new. This
is first time there has been any
mention of Jesus taking a group
of people out of this world. In
verse 14 we read. Believe
in God believe also in me. In
my Fathers house are many
rooms; if it were not so, I would
have told you. I am going there
to prepare a place for you. And
if I go and prepare a place for
you, I will come back and take
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
Three bedroom, 1 1/2 bath. Handy Man Special Opportunity. This
large 2 story home has a great covered porch and sits on a goodsized corner lot. Some updates have been started including new
windows, central heat and AC and newer kitchen cabinets. There is
also a basement and fenced yard. This home is a great opportunity
to invest and make a good return whether you live in it, rent it out
or fix up and resell to someone looking for a move-in ready home.
The price has just been reduced to $24,500 and the seller says all
reasonable offers will be considered. Call Chris at Property Source
LLC for your private showing at (785) 418-5435.
By David Bilderback
you to be with me that you also
may be where I am. You know
the way to the place where I am
going. This seems to answer
Jobs question very well. Jesus
is saying to the disciples and
to us, do not worry. When you
believed in me you put your
faith in me. This involves not
only the consent of the mind,
but an act of the heart and will
of the believer. From this came
the rebirth and the changed life.
From this we know heaven is a
literal place and Jesus is going
there to prepare a place for us.
Jesus says we know the way
to the place where he is going.
Thomas asks Jesus a question,
Lord we dont know where you
are going, so how can we know
the way? Jesus answers with a
verse that is the cornerstone of
Christianity. Jesus said, I am
the way and the truth and the
life. No one comes to the Father
except through me. You cant
get to the Father by service or a
ceremony or works or a church.
The way to the Father is a person Jesus Christ.
913-884-4500
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ADSETTING – 4 Acres with awesome views from this
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7 ACRES – Central Heights area, close to paved road, water
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This will feel like home! This country home has 3 bedrooms,
2 full baths. 1 car attached garage. Family room with a beautiful
rock wood-burning fireplace. You will be able to sit at your
kitchen table & watch all the wildlife. Laundry room/Bathroom.
Vinyl Siding. All new windows. Deck. 100×56 metal building
with electricity. 50×50 barn. 15×40 chicken coop & a small hobby
building that is heated. Has a pond & lots of beautiful mature
trees. All of this sits on 8.3 m/l acres. Cement storm shelter.
$130,000.
2 Bedroom Bungalow, 1 Bath. Large kitchen with new tile counter
tops & new laminate floors. Large laundry room with new laminate
floors. All new paint inside. Large family room with new carpet. New
roof! New front porch! Has central heat & air. Large lot 75×150 with a
wood privacy fence. Covered patio area. Also has a basement. $64,663.
THIS STORY & 1/2 HAS A LOT OF NEW UPDATES. 4 Bedrooms, 2 full baths. New
laminate flooring in kitchen, dining, family room and in all 4 bedrooms. Kitchen
has been remodeled. New tile floors in laundry room and in one of the bathrooms.
House has new paint inside and out! All new windows. New metal roof. New wood
fence. Has a patio out back and a good size yard. $71,750.
Large family home located in the Ottawa area. 2 story home
with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Large front porch. Detached oversized
1 car garage with workshop and attached 2 car carport. Partial
basement. Central heat & air. $72,000.
Lovely home with lots of space! Large eat-in kitchen with lots of cabinets.
Built-in oven & gas stove top. Enter the living room through the beautiful French
doors. Living room also has stone wood-burning fireplace. Formal dining with
hardwood floors. Large master bedroom/master bath & a garden tub/whirlpool.
Laundry hookups are in the walk-out basement. Back yard has patio & wood
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will pay up to $2000 for carpet. $93,750.
Ask about our Real Estate Auction Service 785-448-6191
Agents to assist you:
Carla Walter, Broker
(785) 448-7658
114 W. 4th, Garnett
(785) 448-6191
(800) 530-5971
(785) 448-6200
info@garnettrealestate.com
Visit our informative website at:
www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all
MLS listings & more.
Serving our
community for
over 50 years.
2×5
AD
Tree shaded 1 1/2 story bungalow located close to the school, Lots of potential in this ranch style home
park & walking trail. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Large open living/
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dining room combo. Remodeled kitchen with island has lots of
baths, full basement. Attached 1 car garage
cabinets & counter space. Large wood back deck is shaded by
and oversized detached 2 car garage with
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lot 140 x 150. Has plenty of room for garden,
play area or whatever. $44,000.
Sue Archer
(785) 448-3298
Carol Barnes (785) 448-5300
Delton Hodgson (785) 448-6118
Ron Ratli
(785) 448-8200
Scott Schulte (785) 448-5351
Michelle Ware (785) 214-8489
Juanita Brecht (785) 418-3883
Call us for a quote on all of your insurance needs
LOVE BIG, OLDER HOMES? Enjoy the luxury
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Start your own Wonderful Memories in this beautiful baths. Hardwood floors have been refinished.
move-in ready 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch. Large airy room, Beautiful wood staircase. Enjoy the screened
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$165,000.
elec. hookup & attached workshop. $139,900.
SOLD
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
LOCAL
Dawgs fall in two at 4A State VB
SALINA Stage fright may have gotten the best of the AC volleyball team
Friday, when the squad made its first
appearance at the 4A tournament in
15 years only to fall in the first matches and get bumped out of advancing
to the semi finals.
Topeka-Hayden emerged with the
crown on Saturday after a face-off
against Santa Fe Trail, who entered
the tournament 23-13 and upset
AC in the second match of the day
Thursday. AC also lost to Clearwater
but beat Goodland in its final match.
AC at 29-8 was the top seed in Pool
I, but started slow in its opener with a
motivated 20-16 Clearwater team. AC
lost 25-18, 25-16.
I thought we played nervous
and unaggressive, said head coach
Glenn Suderman. I was impressed
with Clearwater all day. Katelyn
Alley led AC serving with 10, Reagan
Jirak had 6 kills her least in any set
for the day.
AC led in the Santa Fe Trail sets
but bobbled the win in the end, losing
23-25, 25-23, 25-22.
It was the match that got away,
Suderman said. We needed this one
and we had it. We played bad for
about two minutes. Kinlee Jones
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-3-2015 / Ron Serene
MaKayla Kueser takes on two Santa Fe Trail players at the net.
led serving with 12 aces and setting
with 39, Jirak had 17 kills, MaKayla
Kueser led the defense with 13 digs,
Cassidy Lutz had 4 blocks. Alley led
setting overall with 42.
Two losses at the state tournament
means youre heading home, but AC
put the want to into the Goodland
match to salvage some dignity and
bring home a win. The Bulldogs came
out on top 25-23, 25-22.
I was very happy for our seniors
to finish with a big win, Suderman
said. We just wanted it more.
Jones led serving against Goodland
with 13 aces, Jirak and Kueser had 9
kills apiece and Lutz had 8. Lutz and
Jasmine White had 4 blocks each. AC
ended the season 30-10.
Thanks to the fans who traveled
with us and supported us, Suderman
said.
Wilson in top 25 at 4A state
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-3-2015 / Ron Serene
Madison Martin and Reagan Jirak go up for a block in Fridays matchup against
Santa Fe Trail while Katelyn Alley and MaKayla Kueser ready for the follow up.
AC drops Burlington,
heads to Columbus for
1st round of playoffs
COLUMBUS The
AC Bulldogs take
their 5-4 record to
Columbus
Friday
night to play the
defending
state
champs in the opening round of post-season regional play,
Ratliff
in the hunt for the
4A Division II State
Title.
At 9-0, Columbus has the best record
in 4A DII and will be bent on eliminating AC from the post-season lineup
in the opening round. Colby, Wamego
and Hugoton all share a 4-5 mark
with two district wins that got them
into the post-season grid the only
records among the 16 teams that mark
fewer wins than Garnetts. Columbus
crushed Parsons 48-7 in the final game
of the regular season last week.
Considering the Bulldogs went 1-8
last year, head coach Greg Welch said
the anticipation on the part of his
Bulldogs is understandable.
Were excited about being in the
playoffs, Welch said.
The boost in morale comes from
a late-season winning streak which
most recently saw the Bulldogs dispose of Burlington 34-14 to secure the
post-season berth. ACs senior running
back Chase Ratliff racked up 302 yards
against Burlington on 38 carries and
massed three Bulldog touchdowns on
2×5
garnett
club
the way to the win.
We played well, had a great night
in running the ball and had fun in getting the win, Welch said. Our young
kids played inspired defense.
The Bulldogs didnt pass much
against Burlington Ratliff caught two
passes for 10 yards and Devin Katzer
had a single reception for 59 yards, but
the majority of ACs
453 yards came on the
ground. Senior quarterback Jacob Rundle
passed for a total of 69
yards and Kyle Lamb
rushed for 90. AC ran
70 offensive plays to
Burlingtons 48. Rundle
and Katzer both added
touchdowns for AC.
Junior
Adam
Kroft picked off ACs
only interception as
Burlington went to
the air to try to make
up some real estate.
Senior Grady Schuster
had three sacks to cost
Burlington 21 yards.
Tim Comfort led AC in
tackles with 9, Ratliff
and Schuster had 7 each.
Kickoff for the Friday
game between AC and
Columbus is 7 p.m.
rotary
WAMEGO AC sophomore Averi
Wilson finished 23rd out of 102 runners Saturday at the Kansas 4A Cross
Country meet in Wamego.
Wilson, who finished 26th last year
before the state
high school athletics association
changed the womens course from 4k
to 5k the same distance high school
boys run finished
Wilson
in 20:45.17. Callie
Logue, a junior
from Girard, won the day in 4A with
a time of 18:08.87. Senior Riley Osen
of Winfield won the mens division
with a time of 15:44.90. Baldwin won
both the mens and womens team
titles.
Like 2014, Wilson was the only AC
runner to qualify for the state meet.
She ran a 16:20.20 on the 4k course at
the state meet last year. Head coach
Mike Sibley said theres still much to
be heard from Wilson and the rest of
the Bulldog womens cross country
team.
Averi had a great season and put
all of her heart and effort into the
state championship, Sibley said.
Our girls overcame a lot of adversity
this year due to illness and injury,
he said.
Sibley said even though some
may look at the season and say the
Bulldogs didnt see the improvements theyve seen in past years,
a 9th straight league title gives the
teams departing seniors something
to cherish from our season.
Moreover, Sibley said, getting
5 of the 7 seniors girls ( Gwen Sibley,
Maddie Goode, Remi Hedges, Paige
Scheckel, Bel Sibley) named to either
1st or 2nd team all-league was a great
accomplishment.
Next Year Averi, Tiffany Mills,
Paige Rupp, Emma Porter and Lizzy
Comfort will need to pick up the mantle that has been left for them by these
girls, he said.
Sibley also noted the accomplishments of the AC boys squad, in moving from 11th at regionals last year to
4th this year.
Graduating only one senior
should give them great hope that
next year will be their year to return
to state, Sibley said.
Lancers meet Caldwell in bi-district tonight
ALTOONA Crest head coach Chuck
Mahon warns his team and its fans
for tonights bi-district game in 8-man
Division II: beware Caldwells 4-5
record.
They are a well-coached team
who is very explosive on offense,
Mahon says. Their quarterback is
the real deal he along with their
quick offensive line will pose troubles
for us.
The Lancers crushed Altoona last
week 48-0 in only 15 offensive plays
to set up the 1A playoff appearance.
Gage Adams had four carries for 90
yards and three TDs; Evan Godderz
threw three TD passes- two to Hunter
Frazell and one to Garret Sipe. Crest
caused five turnovers and three interceptions, and banked all 48 points in
the first half. But Mahon says thats
where the cake walk ends for the 5-3
Lancers.
For us to be successful, were
going to have to be fundamentally sound on both sides of the ball
2×3
new klein lumbr
(against Caldwell) and take care of
the ball on offense.
A number of the states 1A teams
come to the Big Dance sporting
impressive records. Chase High
School is 9-0 and opens bi-district
play against 8-2 Scandia-Pike Valley
at Chase tonight. Attica-Argonia is
9-0 and opens against 7-2 Hartford at
Argonia. Victoria is 8-0 and opens
against 7-2 Winona-Triplains. Sharon
Springs is 9-0 and opens against OtisBison at 8-1.
2×3
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1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, November 3
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School girls basketball at Santa
Fe Trail
Central Heights Middle School
wrestling at home
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
Wednesday, November 4
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – USD 365 Booster
Club
5:30 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School PTA
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, November 5
4 p.m. – ACJH Girls basketball
at home with Central Heights
4 p.m. – ACJH wrestling at
Burlington with Wellsville
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
Center
1:30 p.m. – Colony United
Methodist Women at Colony
United Methodist Church
6 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
7 p.m. – USD 365 School Board
Friday, November 6
KAY Regional Conference at
ACHS
Saturday, November 7
9 a.m. – Central Heights Middle
School, ACJH wrestling league
tournament at Santa Fe Trail
Monday, November 9
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
4 p.m. – ACJH wrestling at home
with Central Heights, Wellsville
5:30 p.m. – Westphalia basketball
at Uniontown
6 p.m. – Greeley PTO
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
6:30 p.m. – Central Heights
Elementary PTA meeting
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic
Lodge No. 338
Tuesday, November 10
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
3:30 p.m. – ACJH wrestling at Iola
3:30 p.m. – ACHS varsity Scholar
Bowl at Wellsville
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School girls basketball at home
with Burlington
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
Wednesday, November 11
10:30 a.m. – Veterans Day
program at ACHS
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Central Heights Booster
Club
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
Thursday, November 12
1 p.m. – Central Heights
Fall Musical Matinee
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School grils basketball at home
with Wellsville
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Rockers honored as Champion of Hunter Education
Local hunter education instructor Ben
Rockers of Greeley was recognized as one
of the six instructors nationally honored
as Gallery of Guns 2015 Champions of
Hunter Education for outstanding work in
the Hunter Education field. These instructors break the confines of average teaching, giving selflessly to the future of hunting and setting standards in their state for
safe and ethical hunting teachings, and
recruitment and retention of thousands of
students.
The award was presented Sunday, Oct.
24, by Kent Barrett, Hunter Education
Coordinator.
An article in the Fall 2015 issue of
Hunter & Shooting Sports Education
Journal read: Benedick Rockers understands commitment to the sport that he
so loves: Serving as a Hunter Ed area
coordinator and certified Kansas Hunter
Education instructor for 38 years; Ben has
actively recruited and trained many new
instructors from his area, and was selected as the Kansas Region 5 Instructor of the
Year in 2004 and again in 2014.
It is not only his dedication to hunting and hunter education that has been
demonstrated many times over the years,
but also to that of his wife Katie. In 2011,
they were jointly inducted into the Kansas
Hunter Education Instruction Association
Hall of Fame.
Always innovative in approaching
hunter education throughout the years,
Ben also incorporated multiple live-fire
opportunities for his students using muzzleloaders, shot, rifle, archery and pellet
guns as well as developed a comprehensive trail walk that provides students with
a detailed look at hunting during the class.
Ben is also happy to take his passion
and activate it in the field a step deeper.
Approximately 12 years ago, Ben determined that there was too much information to pack into the basic class, so he
started an annual advanced HE class in
conjunction with a youth/novice pheasant hunt at the family farm in Greeley.
With many volunteers from the area, local
game wardens, and assistance, from the
Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and
Tourism, this has grown into a tremendously successful event. Students are provided breakfast and training in advanced
hunting skills and disciplines. The hunt
itself is complete with trained hunting
dogs on a local controlled hunting area,
and incorporates all aspects of the harvest
culminating with the students returning
from the hunt to clean their birds, gear,
prep the birds for cooking, and actually
finishes off with a meal containing their
own harvest. For many, it is the first wild
game they have experienced. Attendance
at this event has grown to over 135 participants a year and has included soldiers
from the Wounded Warrior Project, Boy
Scouts, Big Brothers/Big Sisters, churches and local schools.
Ben and Katie have been married for
33 years and raised a family of hunter
education instructors. At this time, three
of their four children are certified instructors and work with their parents to provide classes.
Above, Ben and Katie Rockers of Greeley were jointly inducted into
the Kansas Hunter Education Instruction Association Hall of Fame
in 2011. Ben Rockers received a national hunter education award
Oct. 24.
Below left, the Rockers have an annual advanced hunters education
course with a youth/novice pheasant hunt at the family farm.
Below right, the annual Women on Target course is another well-attended local hunting education event.
Pieces & Patches Quilt Guild considers fate of old scrapbooks
The Pieces & Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
Vice President, Sandra Moffatt,
on October 22, 2015 at 9:30am
at the Anderson County
Extension meeting room. Roll
call was answered by 29 members and 2 guests, Martha
Miller and Melissa Dodd. The
minutes of the August meeting
were approved as printed in the
newsletter. Terrie Gifford gave
the treasurers report.
The committee list for this
year was again recirculated
and members encouraged to
sign up for committees and
indicate if they would be the
chairman. It was reported that
Eleanor Burns is recovering
well from the heart surgery she
had in September.
Program Sandra Moffatt
listed the following upcoming programs:
November
19 Holiday Sew & Share and
she distributed flyers describing the event;
December
Christmas luncheon; January
Charity quilt sew in; February
Judy Vore will do a trunk show
and a class on Stack & Whack.
Block of the Month
Several members showed
their blocks from the August
pattern. Violet Holt showed
the September block, George
Bailey Star Block, and distributed the pattern. Tammie
Schaffer showed the October
block, Spins & Squares, and
distributed the pattern.
Library Carrie Rulon
& Rose Dennison removed old
books and magazines from the
library. It was decided that
any book that is signed by the
author should be kept in the
library. Members were encouraged to take whatever book or
magazine they would like. It
was suggested that the librarian give a report on a book from
the library at each meeting so
members know what is available in the library and compile
a list of the library books.
Old Business It was
decided to reveal our Secret
Sister during roll call in
December. Sandra requested
that members think about what
to do with the Guilds Old Scrap
books and minutes. Some
options include donating them
to the Historical Museum and/
or putting the information on a
computer disc. Terrie reported that Heartland Quilt Guild
dues are due and they will need
the names of the new president
& program chairman.
New Business Quild
members will use some of the
fabric stored at the extension
office to make charity quilts
and put kits together for our
boutique at the January meeting.
Members were advised
that they can use some of the
donated fabric to make charity
quilts. Carrie Rulon collected names of individuals doing
machine quilting for others and
will include that information
in the next newsletter. Secret
sister– gifts were received by
Terrie Gifford, Rose Dennison,
Violet Holt, Joen Truhe, Lou
Ann Shmidl and Janie Paxton.
Show & TellThe following items were shown: Judy
Stukey a quilt; Sharon Rich a
wall hanging, small quilt and
corn sack quilt; Joleata Kent
a wool rag hooked rug; Judy
McArdle quilt with matching
pillow shams & cases, 2 baby
quilts for nursing mothers
and a baby quilt ; Marvelle
Harris a pillow, 2 table toppers
and a wall hanging; Marlene
Walburn
Christmas quilt;
Connie Hatch table topper;
JoAnn Porter a quilt; Joen
Truhe a quilt, charity quilt and
a T shirt quilt; Kay Roeckers
twin size quilt; Terrie Gifford
small stuffed horse, quilt won
at Kincaid fair and a quilt top:
Sandra Moffatt 4 pot holders;
Ruth Theis
table runner;
Violet Holt a bag, 6 pot holders, Halloween bags and table
toppers; Tammie Schaffer twin
size quilt; Joyce Buckley quilt
with matching pillowcases; Lou
Ann Shmidl scarfs for church;
Marilyn McDonald presidents
block. Judy Stukey gave a very
informative and interesting
program on Continuous Bias
Binding.
Reporting deadline
approaches for foreign
agriculture land owners
GARNETT Anderson County
USDA Farm Service Agency
(FSA) Executive Director Doug
Peine, reminds foreign persons
with an interest in agricultural lands in the United States
that they are required to report
their holdings and any transactions to the U.S. Secretary of
Agriculture.
Any foreign person who
acquires, transfers or holds any
interest, other than a security
interest, in agricultural land in
the United States is required by
law to report the transaction no
later than 90 days after the date
of the transaction, said Peine.
Foreign investors must
file Agricultural Foreign
Investment Disclosure Act
(AFIDA) reports with the FSA
county office that maintains
reports for the county where
the land is located.
Failure to file a report, filing a late report or filing an
inaccurate report can result in
a penalty with fines up to 25
percent of the fair market value
of the agricultural land, said
Peine.
For AFIDA purposes, agricultural land is defined as any
land used for farming, ranching or timber production, if the
tracts total 10 acres or more.
Disclosure reports are also
required when there are changes in land use. For example,
reports are required when land
use changes from nonagricultural to agricultural or from
agricultural to nonagricultural.
Foreign investors must also file
a report when there is a change
in the status of ownership such
as owner changes from foreign
to non-foreign, from non-foreign to foreign or from foreign
to foreign.
Data gained from these disclosures is used to prepare an
annual report to the President
and Congress concerning the
effect of such holdings upon
family farms and rural communities in the United States.
For more information
regarding AFIDA and FSA programs, contact the Anderson
County FSA office at 785-4483128 or visit the USDA Web site
at http://www.usda.gov.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-3-2015 / Photo Submitted
Garnett High School Class of 1985 had its 30-year reunion Saturday, Sept. 26, at Lake Garnett Park.
Front row from left: Stacy (Hodgson) Holloran, Kevin Holloran, Derrick Adams, Anita (Dieker) Wirth;
second row: Andrea (Shay) Sobba, Cecilie (Weems) Stipp, Tara (Peine) Florentin, Kim (Campbell)
Gruner, Diane (Miller) Blann, Todd Barnes, Lynn (Rubick) Suffron, Angie (Miller) Sears, Terry Lewis,
Ralene (Hirt) Heck, Bill Young; back row: Connie (Lewis) Fagg, Brian Rockers, Joyce (Lickteig) Katzer,
Jeanine (Mader) Stifter, Dan Hunt, Lynn Wilson, Gerald Lutz, Rick Guilfoyle. Other class members not
pictured attended an impromptu gathering at the Tradewinds on Friday night and the Cornstock concert
on Saturday night.
Greeley releases first quarter honor roll
The following students are
on the Greeley Elementary
Honor Roll for the first quarter
of the 2015-2016 school year:
All As
Fifth Grade: Reggi Lickteig,
Emma Schaffer, and Evelan
Steele.
Fourth Grade: Preston
Kueser and Alex Schaffer.
A/B
Sixth Grade: Briannah
Lickteig and Kyden Teal.
Fifth Grade: Jake Lee, Lane
Richards, and Tayven Sutton.
Fourth Grade: Brendan
Teal, and Cadence Wilper.
Third
Howard.
Grade:
Dalton
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
BUSINESS
BUSINESS BEAT
Front Row Sports EKAE gets USDA
sold to Coxes
energy grant
GARNETT Roger and Sandy
Sample, after nearly 19 years
of business, have decided to
sell Front Row Sports and its
two locations, Garnett and
Ottawa, to their store manager, David Cox, and his wife,
Lucinda, of Ottawa. The
business will continue to be
a locally owned and operated, hometown sporting goods
store. Customers will see
little change as Front Row
Sports will continue to provide quality screen printing
services as well as affordable
retail stores with name brand
apparel, shoes, and sports
gifts.
David will be a strong successor to this business that we
have grown, Roger Sample
said.
Even though Nov. 9 will be
the first day under the new
ownership, Roger and Sandy
will continue to be involved
with the stores during the
transition period for the next
year. It will be the same easy
company to work with the
same great customer relations
and same friendly employees,
the Samples said.
We couldnt be more excited to have such a great young
man take over our stores and
know that he and Lucinda
will make Front Row Sports
even better in the future,
Sandy Sample said.
Roger and Sandy Sample
said they have appreciated
all their loyal customers and
want to thank them for all
their support through the
many years. They said they
hope customers will give
David and Lucinda the same
support in the future.
TOPEKA East Kansas AgriEnergy LLC of Garnett was
one of nine rural Kansas businesses that recently received
a USDA grant to reduce energy usage and costs in their
operations.
EKAE received a $66,200
grant that will be used to
make LED lighting upgrades
to the existing ethanol plant.
The grants were announced
Friday, Oct. 30, by USDA
Rural Development State
Director Patty Clark. The
funding is for energy efficiency improvements and/or
renewable energy systems.
USDA can assist rural
Kansas businesses and ag producers looking to reduce their
energy costs, by providing
grants, loans and loan guarantees to make the upfront
cost of making the transition
to a more energy-efficient
business more manageable,
Clark said. This funding
will help implement energy-saving measures, and can
improve the bottom line for
the businesses.
Through the Rural Energy
for America Program (REAP),
USDA is providing $781,458
in grants for nine projects
throughout Kansas. Eligible
agricultural producers and
rural small businesses may
use REAP funds to make energy efficiency improvements
or install renewable energy systems including solar,
wind, renewable biomass
(including anaerobic digesters), and geothermal.
U.S.
Secretary
of
Agriculture Tom Vilsack
announced that nationwide,
USDA is providing $102 mil-
Notice of tax levies for Anderson County
(First published in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2015)
lion in loan guarantees and
$71 million in grants for 1,114
projects financed through the
REAP Program. These projects are expected to generate
and/or save 906 million kWh
of energy enough to power
more than 83,675 homes for a
year and cut carbon pollution
by an estimated 455,000 metric
tons. That is the equivalent of
taking more than 131,500 cars
off the road for a year.
Congress created the REAP
program in the 2002 Farm Bill.
Because of the success of the
program, Congress reauthorized it in the 2014 Farm Bill
with guaranteed funding of at
least $50 million annually for
the duration of the five-year
bill. The 2014 Farm Bill builds
on historic economic gains in
rural America over the past
seven years while achieving
meaningful reform and billions of dollars in savings for
taxpayers.
In addition to the grants
announced today, USDA is
reminding eligible applicants
that the department is accepting applications for future
REAP funding. For information on how to apply for
REAP funding and upcoming
deadlines, contact a USDA
Rural Development Business
Program specialist in Kansas:
Doug Bruggeman, Hays
Office, 785-628-3081, Ext. 1435,
doug.bruggeman@ks.usda.
gov
Katie Casper, Iola Office,
620-365-2901, Ext. 1427, katie.
casper@ks.usda.gov
David Kramer, Topeka
Office, 785-271-2700, Ext. 2736,
david.kramer@ks.usda.gov
Travis Snider, Newton
Office, 316-283-0370, Ext. 1439,
travis.snider@ks.usda.gov
oc27t1
Expand your business with eBay, Amazon selling Duplicate Bridge played
So youd love to expand your
business open another store
in a neighboring town or hire
additional sales staff to pursue
new territories, but such an
expansion is a gamble that can
either pay off or cost you a lot of
up front investment if you fail.
As you consider that expansion option and the gamble that
comes with it, consider developing your online selling presence
through options like eBay or
Amazon.
Anyone can sell on eBay or
Amazon if you have an account,
which means you have to have
a credit card, Paypal account or
automatic draft from your bank
account to pay your selling fees
or, if you have a virtual store,
the subscription fees that basically amount to the rent you
pay to be there generally from
$18 to $200 a month depending
on the features you want on
the property. If youre not
familiar with eBay or Amazon
selling, it pays to go to the sites
and buy something, either by
auction or straight sale, and at
least on eBay to sell an individual item to get the feel of it.
Amazon selling is a little different in that its all straight
sales, meaning someone finds
your item and buys it, then you
either ship it to the buyer or
Amazon handles it for you if
youre involved in their inventory fulfillment program. I suggest handling fulfillment of the
order yourself, because Amazon
fees add up.
eBay Store selling can be the
typical auction style for which
the website has become famous,
or a straight sale from your
online store. The advantage
to both eBay and Amazon is
traffic imagine the difference
between having your own store
located on some back country
road versus a giant, burgeoning
shopping mall. A main key to
success is still location, location, location, even if its online.
Unless youre in a populace
area, online selling of services
like house painting or lawn
care may not work well because
of the logistics involved. But
information-based services like
web design, accounting, tax
preparation and certain types
of consulting are made for the
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
virtual-ness of the web. As for
products, if you can ship it or
have the buyer come pick it
up, you can sell it on eBay or
Amazon.
But maybe your product
doesnt lend itself to online
sales in that case you can
consider expanding into another related product or service
or maybe just something thats
keyed to a hobby or interest.
You may even be able to start
with an item or items that are
in your attic or garage. Theres
even a huge market on eBay for
used apparel everything from
your kids outgrown gymnastics
leotards to the old blazer you
never wear.
A couple of have-tos if
youre going to sell online: 1)
most importantly, be aware that
customer reviews will make
you or break you. You have
to be honest, quick with shipping and easy to deal with. Bad
reviews are the number one reason buyers avoid online sellers.
2) Your items must have good
photos and good descriptions.
Dont just tell us youre selling
an old oak barrel, talk about the
whisky that was aged in it and
how its rough look relays 100
years worth of character and
history and why it would make
a cool knick-knack table in your
game room. Sell and show the
sizzle, not the steak. 3) Online
buyers want convenience, so if
you dont take credit cards or
sign up for an online pay service like Paypal, youll complicate yourself right out of sales.
Check out the instructions
and terms as you educate yourself about online selling at these
sites because they change periodically. If youre yearning for
expansion in your business,
online selling may be the way
to sell more stuff.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to him
at review@garnett-ks.com or
(785) 448-3121.
Dave Leitch and Patty
Barr won the duplicate bridge
match September 28 in Garnett.
Lynda Feuerborn and Faye
Leitch came in second. Steve
Brodmerkle and Anita Dennis
ANDERSON
2×2
balanced health
Schedule a complimentary foot scan and evaluation today.
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
519 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F: 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. T/Th: 9 a.m. – Noon
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
MIKE HERMRECK
Sales & Service
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN MOTORS
111 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
North Hwy. 59
in Garnett, KS Jetzon
Cooper
Kumho
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg. Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Patriots Bank Bldg. Richmond
(785) 835-6161
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Millers Construction, Inc.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Feeling A Little Out of Balance?
What Can A Digital Footprint Tell You About Your Spinal Health?
Your overall health starts at your feet, which are the foundation of
your entire body. When you dont have a balanced foundation, it may
cause postural stress and dysfunction in different parts of your body.
Our state of the art Scanner creates a digital image of your feet, that
shows your weight distribution on each foot and
indicates imbalances and weaknesses in your feet.
were in third place.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all
bridge players Wednesdays at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
SALES & SERVICE
Grain Handling Equipment
Livestock Waterers
HOMER RIFFEY SERVICE
321 N. Grant Garnett, Kansas 785-448-2384
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
And
Cou
Ne
Mon
8:0
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Portraits
of Honor
The Reviews Portraits of Honor veterans pictorial book will feature
photographs with basic information about Anderson County veterans
during the past 150 years. In the weeks surrounding the books release
in November 2015, The Review will feature more information about
selected veterans beyond the basic details provided in the book.
Hank Doering
Thanks to his dads permission (and signature), 17-year-old
Henry H. Hank Doering enlisted with the U.S. Navy as soon as
he graduated from Garnett High
School in 1945. He was in Boot
Camp in San Diego when the war
ended. He served on the U.S.S.
St. Louis, which sailed to Pacific
islands picking up the U.S. troops.
He served as an electrician and
movie projector operator. He also
was a boxer in the Navy, and
later boxed in the Golden Glove
contests.
Henry H. Hank Doering
Copies of Portraits of Honor will be available from The Review for $39.95
($43.35 with tax) and may be reserved now by contacting our office,
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett KS 66032, (785) 448-3121,
email admin@garnett-ks.com
Facts about my
metal detector
Im sorry folks, but this
weeks column will be a little
shorter and different in nature.
As most of you already
know, I love to operate a metal
detector. Im always getting all
these questions about my metal
detector. What kind is it? How
deep will it find things? Where
did you get it? Naturally, How
much does one like yours cost?
Etc., etc.
Well here are all the facts
about my Detector. By the
way, its almost an antique like
me.
I purchased my Detector in
2000 from Clevenger Detector
Sales in K.C., Missouri.
It is a Whites 6000 Pro XL,
$699.95.
9.5 Whites ProXL Deep
Scan Coil (Came with detector)
Bulls Eye 5.3 Coil (I use
it the most), $119.95
Whites Royal GT Gold
Titanium Headphones, $49.95
Deluxe Classic Carry All
Bag, $59.95
Suggested Retail Price:
$929.80. I actually purchased
DIGGING UP THE PAST
LOCAL
Hurrah for the Pumpkin Pie
Pumpkins and squash
of many colors, shapes and
sizes, they are available at
local Farmers Markets.
Home cooks and chefs rely
on canned pumpkin puree
because it is a convenience,
has consistent flavor, and
texture. Canned pumpkin is
our seasonal pumpkin fix, for
everything from pies and muffins to savory pots of pumpkin
soup and chili.
But, you might be surprised to know that this pantry staple might be hiding
another ingredient inside
squash! Thats right; some
canned pumpkin puree is
actually made from one or
more types of winter squash,
like Butternut, Hubbard,
Boston Marrow, and Golden
Delicious. These squash varieties can be less stringy and
richer in sweetness and color
than pumpkin.
The label on canned
pumpkin reads 100% pumpkin. However; the USDA is
actually pretty lenient with
its distinction between pumpkin and squash. Heres their
take on the contents of canned
puree: The canned product
prepared from clean, sound,
properly matured, golden
fleshed, firm shelled, sweet
varieties of either pumpkins
and squashes by washing,
stemming, cutting, steaming
and reducing to a pulp.
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
the entire package for $687.95.
Plus a Free Battery Recharge
Unit (valued at $50.00) and a
Free Operating Manual &
Video.
I will share one of my better
metal detector surveys with
you. In 2001 I metal detected
for 3 days over a rather large
area. My finds: 1,074 coins with
a face value of $63.97, plus several gold and sterling silver
rings, charms, medals etc.
My Detector is almost 15
years old and is operating just
as good as the day I purchased
it.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
NANCY SCHUSTER, Frontier Extension District
The term pumpkin can
apply to two of the three varieties of winter squash – C
pepo and C maxima. Within
these two varieties youll
find Connecticut field pumpkins, Dickinson pumpkins,
Kentucky field pumpkins,
as well as Boston marrow
squash, and Golden Delicious
squash.
As you visit local Farmers
Markets this fall for pumpkins, dont be afraid to ask
questions about the varieties of squash local growers
raise and how to prepare
them. Some of the squash,
like Turban, may even look
like decoration. The Turban
has a large orange base with
small top of cream, green and
orange colors. Firm textured,
the inner golden flesh of a
Turban squash has a slightly hazelnut flavor after being
baked or steamed.
When preparing Turban
squash in an oven, cut the
squash lengthwise from the
the Turban squash baked or
steamed.
Be brave at the Farmers
Market this fall and try one
of these squashes Hubbard,
Sugarpump, Sweet Dumpling,
Acorn, Butternut, Gold
Nuggets; you will find them
delicious and easy to prepare.
Substitute squash for pumpkin this Thanksgiving!
Light Pumpkin Pie makes
8 servings
1 cup ginger snap cookies
1 15-ounce can pumpkin or
squash (1 cups)
cup egg whites (about 4)
cup sugar
2 teaspoons pumpkin pie
spice
1 can (12 ounces) evaporated fat-free milk
Preheat the oven to 350
degrees F. Spray 9-inch pie
dish with nonstick cooking
spray.
Grind ginger snaps in a
food processor and pat cookie
crumbs into the dish evenly.
Mix remaining ingredients into a large mixing bowl.
Pour into crust and bake until
knife inserted in center comes
out clean, about 45 minutes.
Cool on wire rack for 2 hours.
Serve immediately or cover
and refrigerate.
Nutrition Fact per 1/8 pie:
220 calories, 4.5 gm fat, 0mg
cholesterol, 160 mg sodium, 39
gm carbohydrates, 3 gm fiber,
28 grams sugar, 7 gm protein.
stem to the bottom. Place the
squash skin side up in a dish
with 1/2 inch of water. Cover
the dish and bake for 1 to 1
1/4 hours at 375 degrees. In a
microwave, cook for approximately 20 minutes in a dish
with a loose cover of plastic
wrap. This squash is available
year round, but best during
August to October.
The Kabocha squash is a
member of the pumpkin family.
Inside the hard deep
green or reddish-orange,
spotted outer skin there is a
semi-firm, dense golden flesh
that has a rich, sweet flavor.
With a flavor that tastes similar to pumpkin meat or a
sweet potato, it is a good substitute for recipes requiring
pumpkin or sweet potatoes as
ingredients. When cooked, its
texture resembles that of a
tender potato. It can be baked,
braised, pureed, stuffed, or
steamed to be served as a side
dish or as a base for soups,
cakes, and pies.
Ambercup squash looks
like a small pumpkin.
Delicata, a long oblong-shaped
squash with a cream colored,
green striped thick outer skin,
and Carnival, shaped like a
slightly flattened pumpkin
with hard, thick, colorful rind
that is mottled with green,
yellow, orange and cream are
golden orange flesh squash
that can be cooked similar to
ROAD…
FROM PAGE 1A
Henry Roeckers
EXTENSION NEWS
3B
cracked significantly. While
most motorists traveling on the
road dont notice the rough surface, its particularly difficult
for the more sensitive, lower
riding sports cars that traverse the road at higher speeds
during the exhibition laps at
the revival.
The road condition is bad
enough that a Ferrari club
that attended the 2014 revival skipped this years event.
Revival organizers told city
leaders they fear more participants will drop out because of
the road condition. They hope
to continue to grow the revival,
which attracts hundreds of cars
and even more spectators to
Garnett in the fall, but worry
that the road condition could
stop the event in its tracks.
The road surface also has
concerned organizers of the
Lake Garnett Enduro Kart
Clubs twice-yearly go-kart
races, Garnett City Manager
Joyce Martin said. Ron
Anderegg, a longtime organizer of the go-kart races, said
some participants have stopped
competing in the local event
because of safety concerns
caused by the rough road sur-
face.
In June, city commissiners
debated redirecting some of
the money it had set aside for
residential street repair toward
the lake road. Supporters of
paving the lake road, including Garnett Mayor Greg Gwin,
argued recreational events
like the sports car revival and
go-kart races bring in more
sales tax money from non-residents to help pay the costs of
paving streets. In the end, city
commissioners decided to fix
residential streets, forgoing
pleas from recreational and car
racing enthusiasts who wanted
work done on the lake road.
The city has a limited annual
budget for street repair, spending between $100,000 to nearly
$200,000 each of the past several
years to maintain city streets.
Since 2011, the city has paid
more than $788,000 for street
work. City staff try to select
streets that are most in need
of repairs. And each year, they
hear from constituents who are
unhappy about the streets chosen and debate which streets
are most deserving.
But the issue is expected
to remain a priority, and City
Manager Joyce Martin said she
has talked to engineers specifi-
2×2 Auto l Home l Life
farm bureau
2×2
diy
Call today to see how I make insurance simple
and can help you protect what matters most.
Aaron Lizer
Aaron
120 SLizer
Maple
Garnett,
KS 66032
120
S. Maple
785-448-6125
Garnett,
KS 66032
785-448-6125
Farm Bureau Property & Casualty Insurance Company,* Western Agricultural Insurance Company,* Farm Bureau Life
Insurance Company*/West Des Moines, IA. *Company providers of Farm Bureau Financial Services PC026MLBC (1214)
cally about improving the road
over the lakes dam. Go-kart
and revival participants were
concerned about the tilting pillars and steep drop off on the
north side of the dam, and engineers have suggested ways to
improve the area. The tilting of
the pillars likely is caused by
too many asphalt layers pushing down the soil, and much
of the problem could be alleviated by scraping off the extra
asphalt, Martin told commissioners at their regular meeting Tuesday, Oct. 27.
Gwin said he felt there are
worse areas on the lake road,
such as near the golf course
entrance. Martin agreed there
are several problem areas. She
added the roads design – with
sharp curves, steep drop offs,
near the lake water and with
several large trees alongside
the road – the lakes sports car
racing days are long behind it.
But with some improvements
to the surface, the lake road
still can attract recreational events like the revival and
go-kart races.
The original Lake Garnett
Racing Association still exists,
although it no longer is active
in organizing races, and still
has some money that could be
used to help with road repairs,
Martin said. She and organizers of the new Grand Prix
Revival event hope to organize
meetings with that group to see
if its possible to use the money
to help fix the lake road.
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys
ns
es of Gu
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
785-418-0711
Ladies Day
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Every Tuesday!
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
www.thegunguys.net
info@thegunguys.net
Beef Noodle Supper
2x2United Methodist Church
Richmond,
richmond
umc KS
Saturday, November 7
5:00 – 7:30 p.m.
$8 and $4
Local beef & other good items!
6×6
shop at home
KANSAS STATEWIDE
ADVERTISING
Send your ad to more than
100 Kansas newspapers.
Ask us for details.
The Anderson County Review
785-448-3121
ANDERSON COUNTYS ONLY
LOCALLY-OWNED NEWSPAPERS
785-448-3121 / FAX 785-448-6253
email: review@garnett-ks.com
Anderson County
Hospital
SAINT LUKES HEALTH SYSTEM
saintlukeshealthsystem.org
421 S. Maple Garnett, KS 66032 (785) 448-3131
dornesinsagy@earthlink.net
DIA
DORNES INSURANCE AGENCY, LLC
Inside Patriots Bank at Princeton, Kansas 66078
Donna Dornes Owner/Agent
Sheri Lickteig Agent
(785) 937-2269
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
WOLKEN
TIRE
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak Garnett
(785) 448-3212
The most
reliable
overnight
shipping
service.
Insurance Agency
118 E. 5th, On the Square, Garnett
(785) 448-3841
Classied ads
only three dollars.
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
your
ads!
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
ads@tradingpostdeals.com
www.tradingpostdeals.com
To advertise your business
here, contact Stacey
at 785-448-3121.
Make your presents felt
DELI BAKERY PHARMACY
The World On Time
Available at Garnett Publishing, 112 W. Sixth, Garnett
AT THE INTERSECTION OF
Hwy. 31 (Park Rd.) & Hwy. 59 in Garnett
421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues – Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
785-448-3038
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
LOCAL
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
Two bedroom house and garden in the country, close to
Bush City. Call evenings (785)
448-5893.
ag11tfn
Two bedroom, very clean, CH
& CA, attached garage. $500/
month. (785) 418-5435.
oc13tf
1 & 2 bedroom – 1 bath, clean,
no pets, no smoking, $375 rent,
$375 deposit. (785) 204-2361.
oc27t4
815 S. Elm – 3 bedroom, 1 bath,
garage, stove, refrigerator, central h/a, no pets, no smoking,
$550 monthly, $500 deposit, (620)
431-8585.
nv3t1
1820 Miller Drive, Lawrence,
$99,900. 3 bedroom, 1 bath
remodeled in (02). Just updated with new HVAC, new paint
inside and out, carpet thru-out,
kitchen floor plus lots more.
Vacant and move-in-ready. Not
a drive by. Diann Lutackas,
KW Legacy Partners, Inc. (785)
633-4333, text: 80354 to 79564.
**jn16**
364 E 1750 Rd, Baldwin City
$330,000. 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms on 5 acres in the country
but close to town. The outbuilding has 3 parking areas and
a studio area upstairs with a
furnace and shop downstairs.
Patty Wiseman, ReeceNichols
Preferred Realty 913-709-0963
**ap21**
4 buildable lots, a house
can be built on each lot. SW
of Wichita in Harper, Kansas.
$20,000 talkes all. taxes are low,
1 lot has cave. Harper is at
Hwy. 2 and 160. Iris Faucett,
(620) 491-0936.
**jn30**
For Sale by Owner – Beautiful
nine year old, 3800+ sq. ft.
home on 3+ acres, blacktop, in
county, just outside Garnett,
KS with 60×42 barn, all in
excellent condition. Must see
to appreciate. $258,900. Serious
inquiries only please. (785) 2041992.
oc27t4*
REAL ESTATE
Osage City Building – for sale
or lease, 8500 sq. ft. Great commercial or retail location. (785)
841-3902 or (785) 979-1008.
**jy7**
1×3
1×3
REAL ESTATE
1×3
CARS & TRUCKS
2000 Ford Mustang – 170,000
miles, new AC, very dependable, runs great, $3,000 OBO.
(785) 204-1103.
nv3t2*
HELP WANTED
Butler Transport Your
Partner In Excellence. CDL
Class A Drivers Needed. Sign
on Bonus. All miles paid. 1-800528-7825 or www.butlertransport.com
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Lori 1-800-926-6869 ext. 303.
1 x 4
richRN – 6A-6P
mond
RN/LPN
A leader in the healthcare
industry, Genesis HealthCare
is now hiring at Richmond
Healthcare and Rehabilitation
Center located in Richmond, KS
B & B Bridge Company, LLC
2×2
is taking applications for construction laborers.
b&b
bridge
Work will
be in the local area along with
If interested call Angie at 620-423-1016 or apply at:
6th & Central St. Paul, KS
PUBLIC AUCTION
2×4
kpa insurance
1×3
1×3
COMPUTER
AD
WORK
Oct. & Nov.
1×3
get 10% off on 10%
Off
updating your
Protec
rusty metal roofs with
Conklins Exterior
Ind
Show Kote Paint
5 Year Warranty
Standard Color: White
Many Options Available
Serving the local area Since
2007
Warranty Certified
Applicators 2007-2015
Insured
Free Estimates
*Extra charge may apply on
roofs over 5/12 pitch
Protec Industries
(785) 304-0117
1×3
(913) 594-2495
Anderson County Road Dept. is accepting bids for
an all metal building, 130 x 80, with plumbing and
electric and finished office space. Bids will be due by
Monday, November 23rd at 9:00 a.m., bids received
after the specified time will be returned unopened.
Bids shall be submitted in a sealed envelope and
labeled New Shop Bid. Bid plans are available upon
request at 409 S. Oak St., Garnett, KS or for questions
call 785-448-3724. A pre-bid conference will be
held on November 10th at 10:00 a.m. for building
contractors and 1:00 p.m. for plumbing & electric
contractors at 409 S. Oak St., Garnett.
2×3
And co eng
new.ads.multiple_Layout 1 9/12/12 9:31 AM Page 3
KL-105.indd 1
For complete sale bill and pictures, check websites:
kansasauctions.net/boone or kansasauctioneers.com
E. Boone Auctions
Eric Boone
620-625-3246 cell phone: 620-496-6312
E-Mail: eboone60@hotmail.com
SERVICES
EEO/AA, M/F, Vet, Disabled
Kugler Company
PO Box 1748
McCook, Nebraska 69001
www.k-lawn.com
model 12, 12 gauge shotgun; COLLECTIBLES: Tiger Woods
bobble heads, football and baseball cards; Denver and Philadelphia
mint 50 states commemorative quarters; 2000, 1996, 2005 and 2006
Super Bowl game coins; European Union euro coinage collection;
Outside Pitch magazine, exclusive edition, Cal Ripken;
FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES: HOUSEHOLD:
SHOP, LAWN AND GARDEN: MISC.
Agriculture Special
Roof Painting Sale
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
We are An Equal Opportunity Employer
2×3
e boone
GUNS: Remington 870 Wingmaster 12 gauge shotgun; Winchester
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services to victims of domestic
violence and sexual abuse. call
(620) 365-7566 or Kansas Hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
Apply online:
www.genesiscareers.jobs
Email:
marcia.hunter@genesishcc.com
If you dont have a K-Lawn dealer in your area, and feel you
have what it takes, were looking to add a few quality dealers
to our network. Call us today at 800-445-9116, or visit us online
today at www.k-lawn.com to learn the full story.
DRUG SCREEN REQUIRED
SERVICES
We offer competitive
compensation, medical, dental,
vision benefits, 401K, vacation
time, growth opportunity
and more.
Your certified local K-Lawn dealer is fully trained to give you the
best lawn in town. Our proprietary lawn chemicals and slow release
fertilizers will make your lawn the envy of any neighborhood.
other jobs in Kansas and Oklahoma.
HELP WANTED
FT every other weekend
CNAs
DIETARY COOK/AIDE
YOU CAN HAVE THE
BEST LAWN IN TOWN
HELP WANTED
Saturday, November 7, 2015 10:30 a.m.
617 North Tennessee St. Iola, KS
Clayton Titel Estate
HELP WANTED
11/26/14 10:32 AM
REAL ESTATE &
PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
Saturday, November 14, 2015 10:00 a.m.
2×52085 3600 St. Kincaid, KS
AD
DIRECTIONS: 169 Hwy. south of Garnett, KS approx. 4 miles to
US-59 S/KS-31, go east on KS-31 approx. 10 miles to SE Ohio Rd.
go south on Ohio Rd. which becomes 3600 Rd. approx. 3 miles. Or
from Kincaid, go west on KS-31 to SE Ohio Rd. then south on
Ohio Rd. which becomes 3600 Rd. approx. 3 miles. (Follow signs)
REAL ESTATE SELLS @ 12:00 P.M.
The Quality You Want
2×4
kpa morton
AGRICULTURE | EQUESTRIAN | GARAGE | COMMERCIAL
With a Price That Fits Your Budget
Whether youre in the market for a storage building, horse
barn or farm shop, Morton Buildings can construct a building
that meets your needs without breaking your budget.
Eight offices serving Kansas
HIGHLY MOTIVATED SELLER! 3 bdrm., 2 1/2 bath home on 79 ac.
Experience surrounding seasonal changes…country style! Spacious home
has nice oak kitchen cabinets w/island, propane heat & central air, large
master bedroom w/bath & large bdrm. upstairs w/half bath, newer dbl.
pane sliding windows & vinyl siding. Watch the wildlife and stunning
sunsets and moonrises from your deck or upstairs balcony overlooking
fields and woods. Includes 30×56 shop w/metal siding & concrete floor.
800-447-7436
mortonbuildings.com
2012 Morton Buildings, Inc. Morton Buildings is a
registered trademark of Morton Buildings, Inc. All
rights reserved. A listing of GC licenses available at
mortonbuildings.com/licenses.aspx. REF CODE 043.
800-447-7436 mortonbuildings.com
ROSS ATKINSON ESTATE/SUE ATKINSON OWNER
AUCTION TERMS : A 10% earnest money payment is required on the day
of the auction. The payment may be in the form of cash, cashiers check,
personal check, or company check. All funds will be deposited and held by
the designated closing company in their trust account. The balance of the
purchase price will be payable at closing with certified check. Prospective
Buyers need to have financing in place by Day of Auction as this Property
will not sell subject to financing. Closing will occur on or before Dec. 15, 2015.
This property is selling in its existing condition with no warranty expressed
by the Seller, Dennis Wendt Auctioneer or Century 21/Pool Realty. Dennis
Wendt Auctioneer and its representatives are acting as Agents of the Seller.
Final sale is subject to the Sellers approval or rejection of all bids.
Pool Realty, Inc. Dennis Wendt, Auctioneer/Realtor
913-755-6565
913-285-0076 913-898-3337
888-755-3423
www.wendtauction.com
Direct Support Professional
COF Training Services, Inc., a non-profit organization providing
services to individuals with disabilities, is seeking full time and part
time direct support professionals (DSPs).
Starting wage is $10.00/Hr.
2×5
cof
A DSP
assists individuals with disabilities in leading a self-directed
life and in contributing to the community, assists with activities of
daily living if needed, and encourages attitudes and behaviors that
enhance community inclusion.
Qualifications for this position include:
A good driving record
A valid drivers license
Must pass background checks
Must pass drug test (pre-employment and random)
Must be flexible in working evenings or overnights or
weekend shifts
High school diploma or GED preferred
CNA/CMA preferred
COF offers offers excellent benefits to full-time employees.
Apply at 1415 S. 6th St., Burlington, Ks., 66839 or 1516 N. Davis
Ave., Ottawa, Ks., 66067. Inquiries may be submitted by e-mail to
jstar@cofts.org.
COF is a drug-free and tobacco-free workplace. Pre-employment
and random drug/alcohol testing is required.
Equal Opportunity Employer
If you are interested in learning more about COF Training
Services, Inc., please visit our website: www.cofts.org
Sales Support Technician
Quality Structures, Inc.
167 Hwy 59, Richmond, KS 66080
Monday – Friday 8:00 am 5:00 pm
Job Summary
2×5 Draw and material
list QSI structures.
Major Job Responsibilities Include:
qsiwith Construction Maestro and Google Sketch-up; Prepare
Proficient
drawings and material list; Interface with sales, production, shipping
and administrative departments as required; Interface with
Construction Maestro software representatives to improve effectiveness
of software systems.
Knowledge, Abilities and Skills Required:
Ability to perform tasks accurately, effectively and in a timely manner;
Must be able to multitask and possess good communications skills;
Must be detailed oriented and have the ability to work under time
constraints; Computer literate with specialized skills in CAD programs;
Highly detail oriented with excellent follow-through skills; High math
aptitude with knowledge of trigonometry;
Previous construction experience, preferably in the post frame industry;
Ability to interface with suppliers, crews and personnel; Read and
interpret engineered drawings.
Benefits include: Paid vacation; Company paid health insurance; 401K
Qualified candidates may apply by sending
their resume to Dan Schaefer at:
Mail: 167 Hwy 59, Richmond, KS 66080 Fax: 785-835-6120
Email: dan.schaefer@qualitystructures.com
Quality Structures, Inc.
Specializing in Complete Post Frame Buildings
2×7.5
elizabeth layton
Community Corrections Clinician: Full-time opening for
a Kansas licensed mental health professional to provide
care coordination and therapy for referrals from Community Corrections for the 4th Judicial District in Ottawa.
Some experience in treating substance use preferred, but
not required. Open until filled. Submit interest & resume to
HR, ELC, PO Box 677, Ottawa, Kansas 66067 hr@laytoncenter.
org EOE
Client Accounts Specialist: Elizabeth Layton Center seeks
full-time Client Accounts Specialist to establish fees, work
delinquent accts, process statements, set up fee reductions & payment plans, other accts receivable activities
and back-up support for other clerical positions. The ability to build rapport & communicate effectively with clients
related to fees & policies will be required. Hours are MonFri 8:30 am to 5:00 pm. Open until filled. Apply at 2537 Eisenhower Road, Ottawa or send resume & letter of interest to
HR, ELC, PO Box 677, Ottawa, Kansas 66067 hr@laytoncenter.
org EOE
Health Home Care Coordinator: Full-time position available to coordinate care of assigned Medicaid Health Home
patients with severe mental illness developing Health
Action Plans (HAP) to improve the overall health status
through outreach and care coordination. Assisting Health
Home members in achieving HAP goals. Regular office
hours in Ottawa. Bachelors degree (social work, preferred)
and good driving record. Open until filled. Send resume &
letter of interest to HR, ELC, PO Box 677, Ottawa, Kansas
66067 hr@laytoncenter.org EOE
After Hours On-Call Screeners: ELC has openings for
After Hours On-Call Screeners. Must be a Masters or Doctorate level Kansas licensed mental health professional to
perform mental health screenings for state hospitalization. Licenses include: LMSW, LMLP, LPC, LMFT, LCP, LSCSW,
LP, or APRN. Familiarity with the Mental Health Reform
screening process preferred, but not required. Reliable
transportation required. Positions available in Ottawa and
Paola. On-call begins at 4:30 p.m. in Ottawa, 6:00 p.m. in
Paola. For more details see www.laytoncenter.org. Apply at
hr@laytoncenter.org. Open until filled. EOE.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
LOCAL
Happy Ad!
5B
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
SERVICES
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
NOTICES
Credit to established accounts
Worlds Largest Gun Show
– November 14 & 15 – Tulsa,
OK Fairgrounds. Saturday 8-6,
Sunday 8-4. Wanenmachers
Tulsa Arms Show. Free
appraisals. Bring your guns!
www.TulsaArmsShow.com
Stop overpaying for your
prescriptions! Save up to 93%!
Call our licensed Canadian and
International pharmacy service to compare prices and get
$15.00 off your first prescription and FREE Shipping. 1-800981-6179
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
1×1 de
MISC. FOR SALE
WANTED
Dish TV Retailer -SAVE!
Starting $19.99/month (for 12
months.) Free Premium Movie
Channels. Free Equipment,
Installation & Activation. Call,
Compare Local Deals! 800-6766809
DIRECTV Starting at $19.99/
mo. Free Installation. Free 3
months of HBO SHOWTIME
CINEMAX starz. Free HD/
DVR Upgrade! 2015 NFL
Sunday Ticket Included (Select
Packages) New Customers
Only. Call 1-800-381-0740
Wanted: House in the country
or land to build on, access to
water and electric. Land, PO
Box 43, Garnett, KS 66032.
oc15t4*
Need to rent – small motorcycle or scooter. Call Steve (785)
433-9070.
nv3t1*
WANTED
Weve Moved!
riffeyNuts & Dried Fruit
California
Sat., Oct. 31
Mon., Nov. 2 – Fri., Nov. 6
Homer Riffeys 785-448-2384
321 N. Grant Garnett
Hecks
PETS
1×3
AD
Registered Shih Tzu – shots
and wormed. Male, $250;
female, $300; older males, $200.
(785) 733-2699.
oc20t3*
Storage Buildings
448-0319
or
204-0369
Delivery Available
JB Construction
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
2×2
Bring us your tired, old saw hecks
running
or not – and get
from $50 to $100*
toward the purchase of a
new, powerful Jonsered.
Happiness is . . . Coming to the
Womens Bazaar to buy: delicious frozen casseroles, homemade baked food, stocking
stuffers, handmade crafts, flea
market. Tuesday, November
3rd, 8 am to 7pm. 2nd & Oak.
oc20t3*
Happiness is . . . California
Nuts and Dried Fruits at
Homer Riffeys. Weve moved!
321 Grant Street, Garnett.
Saturday, October 31 and
Monday-Friday, November 2-6.
(785) 448-2384.
oc27t2*
Happiness is . . . Beef-Noodle
Supper! United Methodist
Church, Richmond, 5-7:30 pm,
$8 & $4. Local beef and other
good items.
nv3t1*
Happiness is . . . Tasting
Kansas wines from Smoky Hill
Vineyards at Askins Beller
Liquor on Friday, November
6th, 4pm-7pm.
nv3t1
Hecks Small
Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS
785-893-1620
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
Sunday, November 8, 2015 Noon
2×3
Over 50 head sell: Fall and Spring
calvingSF
cows andfarms
heifers, open heifers,
and select bulls.
Cow Families Represented:
Nosegay French,
Lucy, and Erica. Catalog available
on our website: www.sffarms.org
ANDERSON COUNTY SALES COMPANY
N. Hwy 59 Garnett, KS 66032
S F Farms, Inc. 785-937-2433 office 785-418-1986 Jodi
3582 John Brown Road Princeton, KS 66078
www.sffarms.org Email: froggattefarms@hotmail.com
Card of Thanks
Thank you to all my family and
friends for the cards, calls, visits
and treats that made by 85th
birthday a memorable one!
1×3
poss
HAPPY ADS
Joe Borntreger
SF Farms Inc. Female Sale
Happiness is . . . Blackhorse
Trading Co. Antiques and
Vintage, 600 N. Maple. Shop for
Christmas vintage decor and
more!
nv3t1*
Happiness is . . . its time to
enroll for Dance! Enrolling now
students 3 & up for tap, jazz,
ballet, lyrical and clogging.
Donnas School of Dance, call
Donna at (785) 448-3819 or email
Nicole at nlbrummel@yahoo.
com
nv3t2
MISC. FOR SALE
20 40 45 48 53 Storage containers centralcontainer.net or
785 655 9430
Happiness is . . . Thanking
everyone who made the Women
on Target and Advanced
Hunting Education possible.
Ben & Katie
nv3t1
CHILDRENS
AIDE
2×3
CHILDRENS
AIDE – Working with children after
sek
mental
school, 15-20 hours/Mon.-Thurs. Requires drivers
license and reliable vehicle. Prefer experience
w/children. Min. 18 years old.
Drug screen required.
Questions, call Michelle at 620-365-5717.
Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center
PO Box 807
Iola, KS 66749.
Applications at 519 S. Elm.
EOE/AA.
Nadine Poss
Anderson
County
news
DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO
Crisis Intervention Coordinator
2×3
eckan
ECKAN (a community action agency) is seeking
to hire an Anderson County Crisis Intervention
Coordinator. This part-time (20 hrs.) position
will operate out of Garnett to provide case
management and other support services to
low-income families throughout Anderson
County. Must be well-organized and have
effective communication skills. Bachelors
Degree in Human Services field preferred, but
not required. $11,400/year. Open until filled.
For a complete job description go to www.eckan.org.
A printable application can also be
downloaded from the site for interested applicants.
785-242-7450, ext. 7100. EOE M/F/D/V.
Save$$$ on
prescription drug costs!
2×4 SHICK can help!
Senior
Health
Insurance Counseling for Kansas
kpa
shick
(SHICK) can assist in comparing the 25 plans
available for Medicare Part D Rx coverage.
See if you qualify for Extra Help with Rx costs!
Open Enrollment
October 15, 2015 December 7, 2015
Call TODAY! 1-800-860-5260.
SHICK
Senior Health Insurance
Counseling for Kansas
SHICK is administered by the Kansas Department for Aging & Disability Services
3×5
lifecare center
3×5
beckman
Eight
RN/LPN – Full-time position available
for a Kansas-licensed nurse.
CNAs – All shifts
Dietary Aide – part time
Medical Records Director – Full time
6B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 3, 2015
County Gets New Bus
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-3-2015 / Photo Submitted
The Garnett Senior Center had a wonderful birthday celebration on Oct. 14 for the seniors who had
October birthdays and all others who attended. The youth from the Beacon of Truth Church in Richmond
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-3-2015 / Vickie Moss
gave a delightful program of singing numerous joyful and praiseful songs for all to enjoy. They were
accompanied on the piano by Katherine Martin and directed by Hannah Yoder. They closed by singing The Anderson County Aging Council received a grant from the Kansas Department of Transportation to
a robust and lively rendition of Jesus Loves the Little Children. The next birthday dinner will be held purchase a new bus. The countys portion wa 20 percent of the cost, or about $12,000 for the $60,000
on Nov. 18 and the program will be presented by Pam McSwane and friends. Please plan to attend at bus from Kansas Truck. Pictured with the bus are board members Clarence Hermann, Rosemary Turner,
11:30 a.m. to enjoy the entertainment, but dont forget to call the day before to reserve your meal. The Patty Jo Ramsey holding granddaughter Sadie Ramsey, and Marlyn Burkhardt, with driver Paul Smith
phone number is (785) 448-6996.
and Ron Anderegg.
holiday
OPEN HOUSE
2×4
frs
Nov. 6-7
2×3
refined recherished
Join Us for our
Holiday Open House
2×4
Friday, November 6th
8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
garnett flowers
and
Saturday, November 7th
9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Come Check Out
2×3
Our New Fall
6th aveMerchandise!
boutique
We now have
Wine Tasting
Rock Revival Jeans!
of Kansas wines
2x4from
askins
Smoky
Hill Vineyard
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Fri., Nov. 6 4 – 7 p.m.
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-2276
Great Holiday
Gifts & Decor
Enjoy Refreshments
Register for Drawing
Please Attend All the
2x3Holiday Open Houses!
Stop by and
barneys
Askins-Beller Liquor
4th & Maple Garnett
(785) 448-5531 Toll Free 888-458-6353
Holiday Open House
November 6 & 7
2×5
Daily
garnett Drawings!
true
value
Food
Samples!
Gifts for
everyone!
FREE
GIFT NG!
PPI
WRA
Garnett True Value
Home Center
410 N. Maple
(785) 448-7106
www.truevalue.com/garnett
Corner of 1st & Hwy. 59 Garnett
HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE
2×3 Fri, Nov. 6 10-5
josephine
Sat., Nov. 7 10-3
Food
Shop At
Samples
Home First!!
Come shop with us!
Josephines
Make your presents felt!
421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues – Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
Garnett
785-448-3038
St. Rose School Support Group
Holiday Craft Show and Bierock Sale
Saturday, November 7, 2015 9:00-3:00
St. Rose School 520 E. 4th Avenue, Garnett, KS
2×2
st rose
The Famous St. Rose Bierocks
Fresh baked bierock lunches and packaged,
frozen bierocks will be sold during the show.
Fresh baked St. Rose cinnamon rolls
will be sold as long as supplies last.
Questions contact Sue Hardman at 785-448-3168.
See Us
while youre
out shopping!
Mike & Cathy Barnes
313 S. Maple Garnett (785) 448-3815
2×2
Holiday Open House
blackhorse
Fri, Nov. 6 & Sat., Nov. 7
Blackhorse Trading Co.
600 N. Maple Garnett, KS
(785) 448-0092
www.blackhorsetradingco.com
Holiday Open House
2×2
Friday, November 6
9 a.m. – 5 p.m.
floral express
Saturday, November 7
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Florals Plants Customized Gifts
Floral Expressions & Salon
4th & Oak On the Square in Downtown Garnett (785) 448-6427

