Anderson County Review — November 7, 2023
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from November 7, 2023. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
Garnett Marine turns letters home
into memoir
Place address label here
See Page 12
C O P Y P R I C E O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
Happy 248th birthday
United States Marine Corps
Nov. 10, 1775
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,KS,KS,and
and
communities.
E-statements & Internet Banking
November 7, 2023
SINCE 1865 157th Year, No. 42
www.garnett-ks.com | (785) 448-3121 | review@garnett-ks.com
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Davids requests, then votes against, Garnett water plant funding
Critics say Davids voted
Democrat line despite need
for projects in 3rd District
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WASHINGTON D.C. Federal funding
for Garnetts water plant project and
numerous other projects in Kansas
won a narrow approval in the U.S.
Congress last week, despite a nay
vote by 3rd District Congresswoman
Sharice Davids that would have
stopped funding for Garnetts project
and others in her district.
House Resolution 4821 contained
nearly $4.8 million in funding for
separate water treatment projects
in Garnett, Olathe,
DeSoto, Edgerton
and Johnson County
all projects within the Kansas 3rd
District. The projects were among
various clean water
projects across the
country part of a
Davids
massive appropriations bill funding
expenses budgeted in the Department
of the Interior, the Environmental
Protection Agency and other associat-
KDOT warns it may
not have enough
snowplow drivers
for winter 2023
Labor shortage could mean
delays in road clearing if storms
drop too much snow, ice in state
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
ed departments.
Republicans slashed 35 percent of
the total initial funding request down
to $25.4 billion cutting the EPAs
own individual appropriation by 39
percent. That move rallied Davids and
other Democrats to vote against the
bill, including its associated Kansas
projects, which eventually passed the
House 213-203. It now moves to the
Senate for consideration.
Eleven Democrats and six
Republicans did not vote on the measure. Republicans, anxious to move
against rapidly expanding federal
spending that exceeds annual tax revenues and a national debt of some $31
trillion, noted the appropriation was
less than that approved for those same
areas in 2018. The reductions didnt
sit well with Democrats, only one of
which voted for the package.
Davids media spokesman Zac
Donely said the congresswoman has
supported various other infrastructure bills in congress and was the only
member of the state delegation to vote
for last years massive infrastructure
bill, which funded some projects but
mainly drove funding into the presidents green energy agenda. He did
not address the 3rd District projects
directly.
The legislation Rep. Davids voted
Cancellation of this years
Veterans Day ceremony places
focus on younger, uninvolved vets
BY CHELSEY DALBINI
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Analysis
GARNETT Friday marks the first time in
recent memory that a Veterans Day assembly
will not be held at Anderson County High
School. Its a sign of the aging times at least
here.
Dwindling able membership at the local
Veterans of Foreign Wars and American
Legion posts gets the blame. Members are
getting too old to do the work anymore, and
although the Cold War and wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan produced a whole new crop of
potential members, theres no one younger
involved to take over.
So, just like it was silenced during the long
days of the Covid pandemic, the bell will not
toll at 11:11 in Garnett to mark the anniversary
of a hard-fought armistice that was purchased
in blood by men from our community and
countless others.
The local area has a strong memory when it
comes to our local heroes. We like to remember them fondly during the Celebration of
Service, in the early summer days surrounding Memorial Day, but what of the men that no
longer have family to remember them? How
does a community excited to place memorial
banners on light poles throughout the town
from Memorial Day to Flag Day mark the passing of a Veterans Day without a veteran-led
ceremony thats been a tradition for decades?
Admittedly, veterans are harder to spot
in public than they used to be. They do not
always wear a tell-tale ball cap with their
campaign ribbons on them. There is no ship
moniker emblazoned on the back of their
casual jacket. Nowhere in public view are
the healed battle wounds or scars. The pride
of the Second World War has shrunk to small
lines in their obituaries: veteran of the Battle
of the Bulge, Electricians Mate 2nd Class USS
Hornet, and Pattons Third Army. Dormant
among those words are stories that are forgotten, like the Garnett boy and the USS Houston.
The USS Houston was not a large ship.
Thinly armored, she was fast sailing, quick
SEE SNOWPLOW ON PAGE 2
SEE FORGET ON PAGE 8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-7-2023 / REVIEW ARCHIVE PHOTO
Some of Anderson Countys WWII veterans listen to the local Veterans Day Ceremony address at
Anderson County Junior-Senior High School in 2015.
What kind of winter is headed our way?
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT What will the 2023 El Nino
bring us for Christmas?
Thats a question farmers, road workers, commuters and kids looking for
snow days off from school are asking as
fall turns to winter in Anderson County
and Eastern Kansas.
But the weather pattern driven by
warmer or cooler El Nino or La Nina
temperatures in the southwestern
SEE DAVIDS ON PAGE 2
The price of forgetting
TOPEKA The Kansas Department of
Transportation is concerned its own staffing
shortages may put snow and ice removal
from the states highways at risk for the winter of 2023.
A press release last week dispursed to state
media contained what can best be described
as a warning and a plea the agency is in
need of equipment operators its primary
snowplow drivers who clear Kansas highways. Vacancies in many of its positions have
remained unfilled, and as winter weather
approached that void is risky.
The notice from KDOT is yet another indicator of a labor shortage felt in most all
sectors of the economy since the end of the
Covid pandemic. Virtually every industry
particularly lower-paid service industries
have been under pressure. Local trucking
and construction companies, city and county
shops have also advertised consistently for
drivers and equipment operators.
The release said the agency has dealt with
reduced staffing in the past, but the shortages
have been greater in recent years. Across the
state, KDOT is about 25% short of its preferred number of snowplow operators needed
to be fully staffed.
KDOT field crews always do their best,
but with less staff, it could cause delays
to clear snow and ice from the highways,
said KDOT Director of Field Operations Clay
Adams. We are able to pull in crews from
across the state to affected areas, but thats
not always possible depending on the scope
and severity of winter storms.
KDOT snowplow operators work 12-hour
shifts. Highways and bridges will be pretreated in advance of approaching storms when
possible.
The agency also will deploy employees
including supervisors and managers with
a Commercial Drivers License (CDL) to
plow snow and will hire seasonal employees.
KDOT assists selected applicants in obtaining
El Nino patterns can mean
warmer, wetter winter, but
almanacs say snow, cold in 23
against would endanger public health,
strain the economy, increase costs,
and decrease natural disaster preparedness, Donely said.
Garnett had requested $5 million
through Davids office for the estimated $22 million project during the
2024 round of federal funding requests
administrated by the Environmental
Protection Agency. The plan would
construct a new water treatment
facility to replace the 1930s-era plant
which city officials say is nearing the
end of its serviceable life. If approved
by the Senate and signed by President
Pacific Ocean has already set an El Nino
course for this winter, and should bring
Kansas a warmer, wetter winter with
some possible respite from the extensive drought most of the past year produced. The El Nino of 2023 followed three
years of La Nina which typically last
1-3 years, while El Ninos usually stick
around 9-12 months.
The last strong El Nino lumbered
through the country in 2015-2016, and it
brought a mild winter with little snow
to much of Kansas, especially in the
eastern third. Climate records kept by
the National Weather Service showed it
to be one of the warmest and least snowy
seasons on record.
In fact the average temperature for
December, January and February that
season was 37.1 degrees according to
Topeka records, which made it the 5th
warmest winter on record in Topeka.
An El Nino typically forces cooler, drier
weather to the northern states while it
delivers more precipitation and warmer
temps to the lower regions of the country.
However Anderson Countys last several major snowfall years have varied
across El Nino or La Nina patterns.
In February 2013 the county logged 19
inches of snow with Pacific Ocean temperatures that qualified as neither El
Nino or La Nina. In 2009, a Christmas
Eve blizzard dropped the first 5.8 inches
SEE WINTER ON PAGE 5
Kansas woman files sweet lawsuit
State regs stopping
practice of sugaring
without pricey license
BY DAVID HICKS
THE SENTINEL
HAYS Sugaring, an ancient
Egyptian form of hair removal
that dates back 30,000 years,
is at the center of a constitutional lawsuit filed by Bryn
Green of Hays. She wants to
offer the service in which
hair is removed by the root
with a simple paste made of
sugar, lemon juice, and water.
However, the Kansas Board of
Cosmetology requires practitioners to be licensed cosmetol-
ogists, which Green is not. The
license requires 1,000 hours
of instruction at an esthetician school or 1,500 hours of
instruction at a cosmetology
school, with no more than 1%
of it in sugaring.
The closest esthetician
school that teaches sugaring
is more than two hours away,
which is prohibitive for the
young mom of a one-year-old.
There is no sugarer in Hays, so
Green drives to Dodge City for
the treatments since she prefers the technique over waxing. She sees an entrepreneurial opportunity in providing
the service in her hometown
SEE SUGAR ON PAGE 2
2
NEWS IN
BRIEF
COMMUNITY BREAKFAST
The Pottawatomie Township
Ruritan are sponsoring a community breakfast at the Lane
Community Building from 7 a.m.
– 9 a.m. on Saturday, November
11. Pancakes, biscuits & gravy,
french toast, scrambled eggs &
sausage patties will be served.
Proceeds go for Community
Service.
NO VETERANS PROGRAM
Due to unforeseen circumstances there will not be a Veterans
Day program this year at ACHS.
PARADE REGISTRATION
The deadline to register entries
for the Garnett Area Chamber of
Commerce Christmas Parade
Christmas In My Hometown
is November 17. Contact the
chamber office at (785) 4486767 for registration information.
AUXILIARY HAM & BEAN
AND SOUP SUPPER
VFW Auxiliary Ham & Beans
and Soup supper will be held
on Friday, November 10 at
the VFW Post. Lunch will be
served at noon and dinner will
be served at 5 p.m. Ham &
Beans, Chicken Noodle & vegetable soup, with cornbread &
desserts.
CENTRAL HEIGHTS FRIENDS
OF THE FFA AUCTION
The Central Heights Friends
of the FFA Auction will take
place on Saturday, November
11, 2023 @ 12:00 p.m. in the
Central Heights Ag Building
3521 Ellis Rd., Richmond, KS.
Proceeds to Friends of the FFA
Scholarship Fund. Please see
page 8 for a sale bill.
TOYS FOR TOTS
The Review has partnered this
year with the U.S. Marine Corps
Reserve as a drop location for
Toys For Tots. Please drop off
new unopened toys, donations accepted through Dec.
6. Donation boxes are located
at Garnett Publishing, Inc., 112
W. 6th Ave.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 will have breakfast on Sunday, November 19,
from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Biscuits
and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage & eggs will be
served.
GARNETT ROTARY CLUB
PANCAKE FEED
The Garnett Rotary Club
Pancake Feedwill be Tuesday,
November 7, 2023 at the
Garnett Methodist Church from
4:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
ACHS SENIOR INFO &
FINANCIAL AID NIGHT
ACHS will be hosting a Senior
Information & Financial Aid
Night on Monday, November
13th at 7pm in the auditorium.
Seniors and parents/guardians
are encouraged to attend to
learn about the FAFSA and other
avenues to help pay for college.
GCC MEMBERSHIP SPECIAL
Join Garnett Country Club for
2024 with $100 down payment
and receive the rest of 2023 for
free! Additionally, new members receive 20% off their first
year. Membership forms may
be obtained at the clubhouse or
online at www.golfgarnett.com.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
RECORD
LAND TRANSFERS
Paul C Behling and Lynne W
Behling to Guy Thomas Kinder and
Aliayah Lynn Johnson: Commencing
491 feet east and 60 feet south of
the nw corner of the se/4 of 25-20-19,
thence running south 296 feet, thence
east 100 feet, thence north 296 feet,
thence west 100 feet to the pob.
Rolf C Richter to Brian Davis: West
15.5 lot 2 & all lots 3 & 4 blk 2
new Orchard Park Addition to City of
Garnett.
ANDERSON COUNTY ACCIDENT
REPORTS FILED
On October 10, a vehicle driven by
Jessica Lynn Audiss, Chanute, was
traveling south on NW Idaho Rd in
the area of 1100 Rd when she struck
a deer that entered the roadway.
On October 16, a vehicle driven by
Jennie Butler, Kincaid, was traveling
southbound on Texas Road when she
collided with a deer.
On October 25, a vehicle driven
by Ashley Deneane Lewis, Joplin,
Missouri, was traveling north on
Highway 59 when she hydroplaned
off the roadway crossing the centerline and going into the west ditch and
through the fence into a pasture.
ANDERSON COUNTY INCIDENT
REPORTS FILED
Robert Arlen Wisdom, Garnett, was
the victim of criminal damage to prop-
erty as his mailbox was hit and damaged by an unknown object or person
or persons causing $100 in damage.
Jeffery Andrew Stulfus, Garnett,
was the victim of criminal damage to
property as his mailbox was hit and
damaged by an unknown object or
person or persons causing $100 in
damage.
ANDERSON COUNTY ARRESTS FILED
On October 27, Devin Michael
West, Garnett, was arrested for criminal damage to property.
On October 27, Jessica Ann
Edwards, Garnett, was arrested for
driving while suspended or revoked
and no liability insurance, 2nd violation in 3 years.
On October 27, Tyler Chance
Lowe, Iola, was arrested for failure to
appear.
On October 29, Alvaro Auerlio
Delgado-Cordova, Kansas City, was
arrested for failure to appear.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Giovanna Rodriguez was booked
into jail on March 3, 2021.
Isidro Madrid was booked into jail
on August 12, 2022.
Eric Howell was booked into jail on
April 20, 2023.
Joseph Wilper was booked into jail
on October 20, 2023.
Juan Velez was booked into jail on
October 23, 2023.
ANDERSON COUNTY
JAIL FARM-INS
Matthew Claycamp was booked
into jail on June 12, 2023.
Tanner Vansickle was booked into
jail on July 13, 2023.
Patrick Stoneking was booked into
jail on July 13, 2023.
Robert Alcher was booked into jail
on August 25, 2023.
Andrew Shubert was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
James Waggoner was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
Andrew Jamison was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
Ronnie Masoner was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
Michael Shaw was booked into jail
on September 8, 2023.
Austin Hutchison was booked into
jail on September 20, 2023.
Brandon Norris was booked into jail
on September 21, 2023.
Javier Romero was booked into jail
on October 4, 2023.
Benjamin Mims was booked into
jail on October 20, 2023.
YOU SAW THIS.
So did your customers.
Call (785) 448-3121 to advertise.
SUGAR…
FROM PAGE 1
but is being blocked by state
regulators.
Bryn Green believes it is
unconstitutional to require a
license for sugaring,
Green is represented free of
charge by the Kansas Justice
Institute; like The Sentinel, KJI
is part of the Kansas Policy
Institute. Its Litigation Director
is Samuel MacRoberts:
People shouldnt be forced
to spend tens of thousands of
dollars on irrelevant cosmetology school, and take irrelevant
examinations, just to be able
to use sugar, lemon juice, and
water to safely remove unwanted hair. Bryn isnt suing the
government for money. Shes
fighting to protect everyones rights under the Kansas
Constitutionthe right to earn
an honest living
Over the decades, occupational licensing has grown
along with a government that
oversees the process, although
the Obama Administration
determined: most research
does not find that licensing
improves quality or public
health and safety.
Bryn believes that licensing
also has no effect on her goal of
becoming a sugarer:
Sugaring is an entirely safe
and natural process; its been
around for centuries. It is ridiculous to me that the requirement is to spend thousands of
dollars, tens of thousands of
dollars, and thousands of hours
to obtain a license that I am
literally going to use 1% of.
SNOWPLOW…
FROM PAGE 1
of blowing snowfall over the
holiday weekend on Anderson
County and the region, in the
middle of an El Nino pattern.
Kansas central location on the
continent gives it equal changes of seeing above normal or
below normal temperatures in
an El Nino.
But who cares about
researched weather forecasting
when theres an Old Farmers
Almanac laying around?
The OFA says Kansas should
expect cold and snowy conditions with snow beginning this
DAVIDS…
FROM PAGE 1
Biden, the bill approved last
week would provide $959,000 of
the $5 million request for the
project.
Garnett City Commissioner
Mark Locke said he had contacted Davids office regarding the vote but had not yet
received a call back.
This is unacceptable,
Locke told the Review. She
needs to tell us why she would
not support projects in her own
district.
Republican critics were
quick to point out the irony
Friday Nov. 10 & Sat. Nov. 11
2×6 Yutzy
See what Garnett businesses
have in store for you this holiday season.
Drawings, goodies, fun & refreshments at each location!
Wax Me Happy Located inside of Natures Touch 117 W 6th
Ave, Garnett Liz Hawkins 785-204-2815 Fri. 10-5, Sat. 10-1
FarmHouse Fresh products, Jane Iredale Mineral Makeup,
Makeup Erasers, Stocking
Stuffers, Gift Certificates.
Offering full body waxing,
facials, Lash Lift and Tint.
6th Ave. Boutique & Western Wear
427 W. 6th Ave (785) 448-2276 Check out our fall/ winter
merchandise and in store specials
both days Friday 10-6 Saturday 10-3
Monroe 816 105 E 4th Ave Garnett 785-204-1277
Facebook: @Monroe816
Your hometown gifting and decorating source! Monroe 816 has all
the things you need to live and
give beautifully. Expanded Holiday Season Hours: M-F 10-5:30,
Sat 9-2 through Dec 23. Come in
and sip while you shop.
The Anderson
County Review is
the longest
continuously
operating
business in
Anderson County,
founded in 1865?
Health Services
DIRECTORY
Dentistry
Family Care
Hospice
AMERICAN LEGION BINGO
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
2×3
AD
in Davids request for funds,
then voting against the bill that
would have awarded a reduced
amount for the projects.
This is funding she requested, then turned around and
voted against because her
party bosses demanded it, said
Delanie Bomar, spokeswoman
for the National Republican
Congressional
Committee.
You have to be afflicted with
Beltway Brain to think voting
against projects benefiting
your district makes sense.
2×8
Holiday Open
House
DID YOU
KNOW?
Bingo at American Legion Post
48 Garnett will be held every
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
month. The eastern half of the
state, according to those predictions, will get above average snowfall with bitter cold
temperatures. North of I-70, the
almanac says Kansas northeastern residents can expect a
white Christmas.
Both the Farmers Almanac
and the Old Farmers Almanac
claim to use secret mathematical and astronomical formulas
for their annual weather forecasts. A woolyworm contacted
yesterday by the Review did
not respond by our press deadline.
Eye Care
(785) 448-6590
427 S. Oak
Garnett
Pharmacy
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
Our Ottawa office:
706 N. Lindenwood Dr.
Hannah Morgan, Agent
Olathe, Ks. 66062
427 S Main St. Ottawa
(913) 661-0466
785-521-2030
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker,
Tucker, Agent
Courtney
Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
M-T-W-F
8-5
SAT 8-10
After Hours By Appt.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
OBITUARIES
FEESE
JULY 21, 1941 – OCTOBER 31, 2023
Larry Feese, age 82, of
Kincaid, Kansas, passed away
on Tuesday, October 31, 2023,
surrounded by his family.
He was born on July 21, 1941,
in Morton, Pennsylvania.
Memorial services were
November 6, 2023, at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel in Garnett,
Kansas.
PEINE
OCTOBER 8, 1927 – NOVEMBER 2, 2023
John Patrick Peine, age 96,
of Garnett, Kansas, passed
away on Thursday, November
2, 2023, at the Anderson County
Residential
Living Center
in Garnett,
Kansas.
He
was
born
on
October
8,
1927, in the
Judy
area
Peine
in Anderson
County, the
son of Walter
and Letha (Scully) Peine. He
attended Garnett schools
and attended Spartan School
of Aeronautics in Tulsa,
Oklahoma.
He served in the United
States Army Air Force, 19451948 and United States Air
Force, 1948-1951. In August
1951, he went to work for Trans
World Airlines, retiring in
November 1992.
John was united in marriage to Mildred Chmidling
on November 20, 1952, at St.
Vincents Church in Kansas
City, Missouri. In 1993, they
moved to Garnett, Kansas.
He was a member of Holy
Angels Catholic Church and
Friends of the Library.
John was preceded in death
by his wife, his parents; two
brothers, three sisters and one
infant granddaughter.
John is survived by his three
sons, Martin Peine and wife
Brenda of Oakland, Arkansas;
Bernard Peine and wife
Kim of Underhill, Vermont;
Michael Peine and wife Karen
of Tonganoxie, Kansas; two
daughters, Marita OReilly and
husband Bill of Bella Vista,
Arkansas; and Donna Buhlig
and husband Randy of St.
Louis, Missouri; five grandchildren; four step-grandchildren;
seven great grandchildren, two
brothers-in-law; and three sisters-in-law.
Mass of Christian Burial
will be held at 10:30AM on
Wednesday, November 8,
2023, at Holy Angels Catholic
Church, Garnett, Kansas.
Burial will follow in Holy
Angels Cemetery, Garnett,
Kansas. A Rosary will be held
at 5:30PM, followed by visitation until 7:30PM on Tuesday
evening at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel,
Garnett, Kansas. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made
to Holy Angels Building Fund
or Friends of the Library, and
left in care of the funeral home.
Condolences may be left at
www.feuerbornfuneral.com
Senior Center pitch results
for 10/19, 10/26 and 11/3
So thankful for all those that
turn out on Thursday evenings
to play 13-point pitch. It's a lot
of fun and a time to get together
with friends.
October 19th game results
are as follows: Dorothy Spencer
won high with nine out of 10
games; Jackie Waddle won the
50/50; Ray Wards took the prize
for winning the least amount of
games and John Walter had the
most perfect hands with four.
On the 26th of October we
had 18 players with these
results: Jackie Waddle won
high with eight of 10 games;
Loydene West won the 50/50;
Dorothy Spencer won low and
Doug McIntosh had the most
perfect hands with three.
Again, on the 2nd of
November we had 18 players
with these results; The birthday boy, Kyle Trendel won
high with eight of 10 games;
John Walter won the 50/50;
Debbie Smith took low and
Karen Register had the most
perfect hands with three.
Come join us on Thursday
evening promptly at six o'clock
at the Senior Center for 10
games of 13-point pitch. There
is always a lot of laughter and
good snacks.
Jan Wards reporting
Richmond Public Library
receives Library Accessibility
Improvement Grant
RICHMOND – The Richmond
Public Library received a
$1,500.00 accessibility improvement grant from the Northeast
Kansas
Library
System
(NEKLS). The grant is to put
in a handicap access from the
road
This ramp will make it
easier for handicap people to
get to the sidewalk. The goal
of the NEKLS Accessibility
Improvement Grant program is
to improve accessibility inside
and around public library
facilities. It was open to public libraries in the northeast
region of Kansas. 18 libraries
were selected to participate in
this grant cycle.
Libraries impact a community through programs and
services that enrich lives. We
look forward to hearing about
the results of these grantee programs and how they offered
high-quality learning opportunities, explained Michael
McDonald, director of NEKLS.
About the Richmond Public
Library
The library is located on
Central street between city
hall and Beachner Grain. The
library has been in its current
building since 1969. There have
been a few additions since coming to this building.
The Library tries to have
something for everyone. Mostly
we do crafts since they are the
most cost effect things we can
do. We have story time, after
school crafts, adult crafts and
summer reading for everyone.
Stop in and see us some time!
About NEKLS
Northeast Kansas Library
System (NEKLS) is one of seven
Kansas Regional Systems of
Cooperating Libraries. NEKLS
is dedicated to providing universal access to exceptional
library service through its 117
member libraries (11 academic;
48 public; 50 school districts;
8 special) in the 14 counties
of Northeast Kansas through
the cooperation and peer support of NEKLS member libraries, and the assistance of the
NEKLS staff of library consultants.
Obituary Charges/Policy
Full obituaries are published as submitted in the
Review at the rate of 18 per word and include a
photo at no charge. Death notices are published
free and include name, date of birth and death
and service information. A photo may be added
to a death notice for a $10 fee. Obituaries, jpeg
photos and death notices may be emailed to
review@garnett-ks.com with a phone number
for confirmation. Payment may be arranged
through your funeral home or directly with The
Review. We accept all major credit cards.
Questions?
Dont be afraid to
return to the father
In Luke 15:11-31 Jesus records
the parable of the lost son. A man
had two sons. The sons lived with
the father and reaped the benefits
thereof. The youngest son grew
tired of living with the father and
requested his share of the estate.
So the father divided his estate
between them. The youngest
son then got together all he had,
and set off for a far country and
squandered his wealth on wild
living. So the youngest son took
what would have eventually been
his and wasted it.
This is similar to what happened in the Garden of Eden.
They like the prodigal son wanted for nothing. Yet they chose to
disobey Gods command to not
eat of the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil and as a result
were banished from the garden
and entered into their own far
country experience.
Our choices come with consequences. We read in the parable,
then the younger son began to
be in need. No matter where he
turned he could find no relief.
All his friends who had helped
him waste his inheritance were
no where to be found. Here it
becomes important to recognize
that Jesus was addressing a
Jewish audience and their absolute intolerance for pork. We
read the only thing the young
man could do was hire himself
out to a citizen of the country
who sent him to feed his pigs. The
only thing the young man could
find to eat was the leavings of the
pigs. His life had been reduced to
living in a pig sty. This seemed
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
to continue for some time and the
young man was afraid to return
to his father having wasted his
inheritance.
I wonder how many times this
type of thinking keeps people in
their own pig sty? People get
afraid of what the consequences might be if they repent and
return to God or they worry what
the people in the pig sty with
them might think. There are any
number of excuses that can keep
people wallowing in sin. If we
think we are above getting into
a pig sty be advised they come in
high, middle or low class.
When the young man in the
parable decided to return home
the text tells us the father was
overjoyed, saying to the other
brother. This brother of yours
was dead and is now alive again;
he was lost and is found. You
and I like the prodigal can return
to the Father. Jesus tells us in
Revelation 22:17, Whoever is
thirsty, let him come; and whoever wishes, let him take the free
gift of the water of life. No matter
where you are in the pig stein one
step out of the pig stein toward
the Father will be the beginning
you have to take to return.
Garnett V.F.W Auxiliary
2×2 VFW Ham
Ham & Bean
& Beans and Soup Feed
Friday., Nov. 10
Noon & 5 p.m.
Call The Review at (785) 448-3121.
Ham & Beans, Chicken Noodle and
Vegetable Soup, Cornbread & Desserts
V.F.W. Post 6397 Garnett
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: taco platters, beef/chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: bbq & burgers, open-face roast
beef or 1/2 lb. cheeseburger
ALL AVAILABLE
Wednesday: Fried chicken
FAMILY-STYLE!
Thursday: Meatloaf
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
Every Sunday
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
11
a.m. – 2 p.m.
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
2×3
Farmers State
PAN-FRIED
CHICKEN
Sunday: Homemade pan-fried chicken w/sides
3
NOTICE
2×2 AC
The
Anderson County Landfill will be
Landfill
closed Friday, November 10 and
Saturday November 11,
in observance of Veterans Day.
Questions? Call (785) 448-3109
Homemade
In observance of Veterans Day, our drive-thrus
will not be open for business Saturday, Nov. 11
Join us in Honoring
Americas Veterans.
Our military veterans have helped make the
United States the greatest nation in the world.
On November 11, Veterans Day, we salute
the brave men and women who have served in the
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard.
We thank them for their patriotism
and protection of our country.
2×2 Good
Shepherd
Our locations will not be open Saturday, Nov. 11.
We will reopen Monday morning.
Garnett Gardner
Princeton
Richmond
Westphalia
www.patriotsbank.com
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
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Classied ads
only three dollars.
WOLKEN
TIRE
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak Garnett
(785) 448-3212
The most
reliable
overnight
shipping
service.
118 E. 5th, on the square, Garnett
(785) 448-3841
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
785-448-2121
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.
421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues – Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
785-448-3038
4
Awarded more than 60 times for excellence in news, opinion and advertsing by
newspaper professionals across the country but our highest honor is your readership.
OPINION
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
Medicaid expansion: Kellys new Kalamity
Governor Kellys so busy patting herself on
the back for the strong Kansas jobs picture
and overflowing tax receipts built by Kansas
businesses, shes forgetting all that success is
another logical reason not to lower the bar to let
more able bodied people onto the states health
welfare program.
Figures show its true, and the burgeoning
employment picture in Kansas and across the
nation backs up the numbers. Despite spiking
costs and interest rates, companies are hiring,
and many of them are offering health insurance
benefits as a perq to lure workers to get them to
come to work and stay.
So when health insurance offerings are
expanding by companies hiring more people,
and the existing system is already in place for
people who really need it, why drop the eligibility standards to allow 140,000 more people onto
the state program?
Its understandable that Kelly wants a political win before she leaves office in a few years
something to hang her hat on other than presiding over Kansas becoming the biggest abortion destination in the Midwest and her valiant
efforts to ensure boys get to hang out in your
daughters gym locker room at school.
But other than feasting on the promise of
more tasty federal dollars something the
Kansas tax-generated cash surplus itself proves
is unneeded theres just no justification for
expanding KanCare (Medicaid). Thats especially true now, even with the dangled carrot of a
90 percent cost reimbursement from our federal
taxes (our state taxes will pay the other 10 percent), since so many other states have proven
their own Medicaid expansion was a pig in a
poke and a very expensive one.
Sparsely-populated Montana, for example,
estimated expanding its program in 2016 would
bring in 25,000 more enrollees to top out its total
at some 59,000. Today Montana Medicaid serves
a whopping 125,000 residents this in a state of
just over a million souls. More than 4 in every 10
are able-bodied adults more than the number
of children enrolled in traditional Medicaid.
Costs spiked exponentially, to the point critics
in the state now say people who really need it
arent getting benefits.
Those stories arent rare within this
ObamaCare legacy. Across the board, actual
enrollment averages 160 percent of initial estimates, and average costs per enrollee are 64
percent higher than projections. It is a debacle
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
in the billions.
Californias expansion was 278 percent of its
projections, pushing the state into a $54 billion
budget deficit which forced cuts to education to
pay the costs. Arkansas projected to add 250,000
presently able-bodied adults to the system. They
got 340,000, and in two and a half years saw
actual costs to the state of 79 percent over projections.
As weve experienced in the past two years at
the U.S. southern border, dropping the gates and
letting more people in has proven to be a bad idea
for the hosts who pay the bills. Incidentally who
knows what the impact on expanded Medicaid
programs will be when those 6 million new illegal immigrants apply for state benefits where
theyre available?
The encouraging reality is that health coverage is expanding due to competition for employees without expensive freebies from states for
people who can rightfully pay their own way.
U.S. census statistics show the percentage of
working-age adults 19 to 64 without health insurance fell from 11.6 percent in 2021 to 10.8 percent
in 2022, primarily driven by an increase in
employment-based coverage. That figure now
sits at about 8.4 percent.
Contrary to Barack Hussein Obamas proclamation about American business success years
ago that you didnt build that, the system is
working. Despite a record tax burden, the resilience of Kansas businesses and industries is
not just bolstering our economy but conducting
their own expansion of health care coverage.
Expanding Medicaid in Kansas would be just
another of Laura Kellys bad ideas. ###
The Anderson County Reviews
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
My comment is on the Crest bond issue. If the
bond does pass, five years later if the state
decides to consolidate the schools, Crest would
go to Garnett schools and Crest taxpayers would
have to pay on two different bonds then.
I want to thank all who who saw me struggling
with my wheelchair at the South Maple convenience store when loading and unloading and
pumping the gas. My husbands been in the
hospital for two weeks and I also want to thank
the EMTs for helping him get up off the ground
when he fell and all the personnel at the hospital that have been helping me with the loading
and unloading the wheelchair. Thanks to all the
friends and strangers whove been kind enough
to help an older person struggling. Thank you
End the Free Lunch era in government-backed student loans
As payments on federal student loans come
due again this month, everyone is worried,
from the estimated 40 million Americans who
owe on these loans to your local animal shelter.
Animal shelter? According to a USA Today
story, animal shelter people fear families may
be forced to give away their pets to afford
student loans theyve been allowed to ignore
since the Covid pandemic. As many as 85 percent say they expect
financial hardship,
Theres no good
U.S. News and World
Report claims.
reason the governOf course, there
are alternatives. The
ment should keep
story suggests people
look for free or donatmaking loans to
ed resources, at food
those who wont be
banks and, yes, at petfood banks, for startable to repay
ers. Maybe you dont
have to dump your dog.
But how did we get from the day when
student loans were a relatively simple transaction families borrowed money, graduates
paid it back to where student loans are considered a major hardship?
Good question.
A lot of it may have to do with Democrats
having promised relief to those who say
they cant afford to pay their loans. Still more
may stem from the programs propensity to
loan more and more money to those who may
GUEST COMMENTARY
STEVE HAYNES, Haynes Publishing Co.
have little chance of paying it back. Like
English majors.
Sorry, thats a bad joke, but the problem is
real. Over the last couple of decades, the cost
of college has soared as states cut their contributions to record low levels. Universities,
stuck in the middle, responded not by cutting
costs, but raising tuition and other fees.
So, the number of people who have trouble
paying for college climbed along with pay for
professors and other expenses. The government didnt want to turn anyone away, so it
just kept shoveling out money.
After his first proposal to forgive millions
of student loans was found to be illegal by
the courts, President Joe Biden came up with
another plan. Its still not passed muster with
the judiciary, but it gives people hope. That
may or may not materialize, but it encourages
them to put off paying these loans.
You see stories about people past retirement age who cant pay student loans. Those
who were responsible in payments and are
doing well have already eliminated their
loans, of course, and that is commendable.
But what do we do now?
We have no problem with the government
working with people to help them get out of a
jam as long as they agree to pay their bills as
promised.
Going forward, wed like to see a return
of more responsibility to the loan program.
Theres no good reason the government
should keep making loans to those who wont
be able to repay, though we admit, that can be
hard to predict. But not everyone belongs in a
four-year college program.
Parents might want to prioritize saving
money for their kids college, and university
boards need to hold cost increases down by
joining the battle against inflation. They must
realize their costs cant continue to rise without limit.
Its important that the government focus on
those students who might not otherwise get
to college, but should be there, including the
poor and those whove faced racial or other
discrimination.
But this free-lunch era needs to come to a
close.
Steve Haynes is the former president of
NorWest Newspapers in Oberlin, Ks.
Why do some American students despise Western Civilization?
The cataract of anti-Israel sentiment on
college campuses has been shocking, but it
shouldnt be surprising.
It is the poisoned fruit of teaching a generation of college students to despise their own
civilization.
Jesse Jackson famously led a chant at
Stanford University in 1987, Hey, hey, ho,
ho, Western Civ has got to go. He was talking
about the college course, but he might as well
have been talking about the thing itself.
Jackson and his allies had extraordinary success in extinguishing the teaching
of Western Civ. Not only have we largely
stopped transmitting the story of our own civilization, we have substituted an alternative
narrative that the West is reducible to racism,
imperialism and colonialism.
It is in this context that the current outburst of anti-Zionism has to be understood.
Yes, it has been fed by anti-Israel agitation on
campus over the decades and yes, students are
susceptible to witless radicalism in the best
of circumstances. Yet the loathing of Israel is
particularly intense because it is viewed as
an outpost of Western civilization and all its
alleged ills.
The hatred of Israel is tainted by and, in
some cases, driven by anti-Semitism. Another
way to look at it, though, is that its not so
much about hatred of the the other, as progressives put it, as hatred of ourselves and all
our works.
It is, on one level, incorrect to consider
Israel exclusively an artifact of the West. The
Jews are indigenous to the region going back
to Abraham, with their story caught up in the
story of the land. A large proportion of the
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
current population traces its origins from the
Middle East and North Africa, rather than
Europe.
But there is no doubt that Israel is a
Western society — in its political system, in its
respects for rights, in its innovative economy,
in its mores. Someone sitting in a coffee shop
in Tel Aviv could easily think they were in
any thriving coastal society in the West.
From any rational perspective, this would
be something to celebrate. Many legitimate
criticisms can be made of Israel, and indeed
are a feature of the Israeli domestic debate
itself, but theres no doubt that it is a flourishing society.
If Gaza were equally Westernized, it would
be worrying about whether its overbuilding
seaside real estate rather than having to get
water and electricity from the neighboring
country its governing authority — a savage
terror group — is trying to destroy.
Yet this is the society that anti-Western
opinion holds up and wants to sweep all before
it. This point of view loves Gaza for its failure
and hates Israel for its success; loves Gaza for
its terror and hates Israel for its self-defense;
loves Gaza for its vicious anti-Western sponsors and hates Israel for its Western allies,
especially the United States.
If this seems perverse, its what youd
expect of students and young people who have
absorbed the premises of Michel Foucault,
Howard Zinn, Edward Said and their imitators. Even if students have never heard of
them, these men and their thought suffuse
higher education.
But what about the violence? How can
these kids look past it, or implicitly endorse
it?
Violence is part of the radical anti-Western
vision. The anti-colonial bible, The Wretched
of the Earth, written by Frantz Fanon in 1961,
is widely taught on campus. Fanon sketched
out a woke worldview before anyone used that
term, arguing that, as a New Yorker essay put
it, the Western bourgeoisie was fundamentally racist and its bourgeois ideology of
equality and dignity was merely a cover for
capitalist-imperialist rapacity.
Fanon wrote that decolonization is always
a violent phenomenon, and in a preface to
the book, the French philosopher Jean-Paul
Sartre declared that the wretched of the earth
become men through mad fury.
By this standard, Hamas is a good and
worthy anti-colonial organization, and theres
no wonder it has found supporters and useful
idiots among the Wests self-loathing radicals.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
very much.
Im just trying to figure out, its really strange
the things that this world and this town worship.
I just want to say that I think the school Crest
school board, superintendent and staff do a
great job looking out for our kids and everybody needs to consider voting yes on the bond
issue November 7th. Our community and our
school need this bond to pass.
Vote yes on USD 479 school bond. Its time to
invest in the students at Crest. We as adults
have a responsibility to construct an environment for future generations. Yes, this comes
with a price tag just like everything does. You
should help fulfill a financial responsibility to
get this goal accomplished. Thank you.
This call is a gratitude post directed at our
Crest USD 479 students staff administrators
and board members that have been victims of
undeserved riducule lately. What an incredible district we have that consists of multiple
communities and families bonding and working together for our students and our future.
Proud of all who are making this happen and
a special thank you to our admin and board
for the thankless and countless hours you
provide. It is definitely noted and appreciated
by most.
Really? One of Garnetts stately homes on
Fourth Avenue with a Merry Grinchmas
banner? Taking out Christ and substituting
Grinch? Not at my house.
I just want to express my thanks to the school
board and Crest administration for a working
so hard for our Crest kids. It is apparent to
many, with the exception of a couple naysayers, how much they care about the well-being
and future of Crest students. The improvement proposed will set our kids up to succeed.
Thank you so much and proud to be a Lancer.
Just want to thank the Crest administration
for causing all this animosity in our communites with this $6 million bond issue. The
signs say invest in our children. The bond
does not invest in the education of our children it is to benefit the Crest administration
and the school board members. Good job
using underhanded things to get what you
want. You are being dishonest to cover for
the poor education our students are getting
at Crest.
The more I drive around town the more stray
cats I see and theres lots and lots of stray cats.
When is the city going to get their act together
and get something done with these cats?
What kind of President doesnt care if over
100,000 young Americans ages 18 to 44 are
killed each year from fentanyl, and he still
claims our southern border is closed? Ill tell
you, one sick evil (deleted) who needs to be
impeached ASAP.
If youre wondering how some can be so hateful by attacking others over a bond issue, let
me help you understand. Greed has no boundaries. I am proud of and grateful for anyone
willing to set self aside and support USD 479
children in school.
Crest 20-year bond issue says save our kids.
But our kids preschool through seniors, if
they stay in the district, they will have to pay
back the bond.
Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right
of the people peaceably to assemble,
and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
5
WINTER…
HISTORY
Four more finds from current sites
Its time for me to share a
few more of my finds from both
the old farm site and the cabin
site. Just when we got some
much needed rain for me to
continue excavating, Old Man
Winter had to arrive. Since it
says its 25 degrees outside, Im
not even going out, let alone
dig.
Oh yes, I didnt attend the
Fix It project in Topeka as
planned, so therefore I wont
be sharing that adventure with
you.
Here are photos of four more
of my finds.
#1 – This is a large iron key.
I wish I knew what it was used
for.
#2 – Hand stamped 1882 34
#1
FROM PAGE 1
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
Brass tag
#3 – 1942-D World War II
Penny
#4 – A very heavy cast iron
burner found near where the
old smoke house once stood.
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers. 31Oct2023
#2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-07-2023 / ARCHIVE
Circa – December 1983 – Pictured are 3 Garnett players that were named to the all-tournament team at
the Osawatomie Tournament. From left: Danny Ray, Debbie Mayes and Doug Erhart. Erhart earned
first team honors and Ray and Mayes made the second team.
of blowing snowfall over the
holiday weekend on Anderson
County and the region, in the
middle of an El Nino pattern.
Kansas central location on the
continent gives it equal chances of seeing above normal or
below normal temperatures in
an El Nino.
But who cares about
researched weather forecasting
when theres an Old Farmers
Almanac laying around?
The OFA says Kansas should
expect cold and snowy conditions with snow beginning this
month. The eastern half of the
state, according to those predictions, will get above average snowfall with bitter cold
temperatures. North of I-70, the
almanac says Kansas northeastern residents can expect a
white Christmas.
Both the Farmers Almanac
and the Old Farmers Almanac
claim to use secret mathematical and astronomical formulas
for their annual weather forecasts. A woolyworm contacted
yesterday by the Review did not
respond by our press deadline.
KDA warns poultry owners of HPAI resurgence nationwide
MANHATTAN, Kansas Fall has
brought a resurgence of highly
pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI)
nationwide, including cases in
several states that border Kansas
Missouri, Oklahoma and
Colorado. Although Kansas has
not confirmed a case of HPAI in a
domestic/commercial flock since
April 2023, the primary source of
spread for this outbreak continues
to be wild migratory waterfowl, so
the threat of exposure to susceptible birds in Kansas is high.
Anyone involved with poultry
production from the small backyard chicken owner to the large
commercial producer should
review their biosecurity activities to assure the health of their
birds. Find guidance on biosecurity on the KDA Division of Animal
Health webpage at agriculture.
ks.gov/AvianInfluenza.
Highly pathogenic avian influenza is a highly contagious viral
disease that can infect chickens,
gamebirds, turkeys, and other
#4
birds and can cause severe illness
and/or sudden death in infected
birds. This outbreak has seen
illness and mortality in a wider
scope of bird species than past outbreaks, including wild and domestic waterfowl. Attentively monitor
your birds for symptoms of HPAI
which include: coughing, sneezing, nasal discharge, and other
signs of respiratory distress; lack
of energy and appetite; decreased
water consumption; decreased egg
production and/or soft-shelled,
misshapen eggs; incoordination;
and diarrhea. Avian influenza can
also cause sudden death in birds
even if they arent showing other
symptoms.
If these symptoms are observed
in your birds, immediately contact your veterinarian. If you
dont have a regular veterinarian,
contact KDAs Division of Animal
Health office toll-free at 833-7652006.
According to the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, the recent HPAI detections do not present an immediate public health concern. Birds
and eggs from the infected flock
will not enter the food system. As
a reminder, the proper handling
and cooking of all poultry and
eggs to an internal temperature of
165F is recommended as a general
food safety precaution.
For more information about
HPAI, call KDA at 833-765-2006.
Pancake
Supper
Benefiting the projects
of the
Garnett Rotary Club
Nov. 7, 2023 4:30-7 p.m.
Garnett Methodist Church
Adults $8 Kids $5
IN BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
TC Auto Repair
Parker, Ks
Specializing in:
Small engines ATV/UTV
equipment repair oil changes
Taylor Chapman (620) 600-3692
Denis Wiesner (620) 224-6107
Just 8 bucks a
block per week to
list your
business here!
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
LicensedElectricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
QualityServiceFor
Over 20 Years.
ServingAnderson
&FranklinCounties.
Always
Expect
The
Best!
WHOLESALE WASHER CO.
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
Matters
HOT & COLD HIGH
PRESSURE WASHERS
New & Reconditioned
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
(620) 583-2421 Eureka, Ks.
Hecks Moving Service
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Howard Yoder
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
(785) 489-2212
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Inspected Facility
Ashton Heck
(785) 204-0369
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
1-800-823-8609
Post Frame Construction
Residential Slab Homes
www.yutzyconstruction.com
6
LOCAL
6×21
Toys for Tots
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
community
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 23-11-07 / KEVIN GAINES
Even though it was an unseasonably cold Halloween,
Garnett Elementary and St. Rose grade school students took to the downtown square for the annual
Halloween parade Tuesday.
Search
these local real estate professionals
if youre looking to
buy sell!
or
IMPRESSIVE HOME! 3+bedroom,
2-bath historic 1.5-story home on
a corner lot. Original woodwork includes hardwood floors. Newer wiring,
plumbing and more. Wrap around
porch. Deck. 2-car garage with living
quarters above. $220,000.
LOTS OF UPDATES! 3-bedroom, 2-bath
ranch style home. New and newer flooring.
Some fresh paint. Most windows are newer.
Newer siding. New shingles. Deck. Attached
2-car garage with workshop area.
Now $194,000.
The Place To Find Your Place
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
501 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
info@KsPropertyPlace.com Call (785) 448-3999
Beth Mersman 785.448.7500 Deb Price 913.244.1101
Lisa Sears 785.448.8454 Holly Byerley 913.256.9486 Ben Yoder 785.448.4419
Jeremiah Bently 785.893.2092 Kelly Tippetts 785.418.1732
investigate the potential
value of your real estate
asset and how soon we
might accomplish your sale.
Call Sherry (785) 304-2029
201 N. Maple
Garnett, Ks., 66032
benjaminrealty201@gmail.com
Audrey LeVota …………….(785) 893-2231
913-884-4500
Carol Barnes 785-448-5300/Chris Cygan 785-418-5435
40 ACRES Rolling prairie grass with fantastic views! Corner tract
with road on two sides. Good fence on all sides. Located near Welda.
$170,000 *REDUCED TO $160,000
LAND-CENTRAL HEIGHTS 11 acres, grass, trees, pond, driveway,
power, lagoon, 24×30 2-car garage. Not much
D left to do here for your
SOL
new land to be ready for your home. $119,900.
Call anytime for more
details.
CLOSE TO TOWN 57 acres right at the edge of Garnett! 3
Dwith attached 2 car garage.
bedroom ranch style home fixer upper
SOLfrontage on 2 sides. Property
Detached garage and 2 barns. Road
has 2 phone towers for extra income. Priced to sell at $279,500
TOWN SQUARE Historic building on the square! Newer roof, central heat and AC. Even has a partial basement.This has been a prime
retail spot in downtown Garnett for generatoins. Now you can make it
what youd like and/or need for your business, or own an investment
property that is a piece of the towns history. $74,900
COUNTRY CUTIE 3.5 acres not far from town! 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, basement, 2 car attached garage.
Fantastic finishes throughLD building with extra lean-to area.
out, great kitchen island. 30×40
SOshop
Youve got to take a look at this cutie for only $340,000
Need to sell? Just call, well get it done!
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
Everything Spencer Walter ……………(785) 304-2119
Sammy Walter ……………(785) 304-6720
we touch Brandon Bennedict ………(785) 448-5350
Baugher ………….(785) 448-9064
turns to Krystal
Bryce Fritz………………….(785) 304-2336
sold!
Devin Katzer ………………(785) 304-1127
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
(785) 448-7658
215 N Kallock Street, Richmond, KS
$166,000 Back on market! No fault to
the seller. Beautiful Ranch-Style home!
Move in ready with new roof.
D
L
SO D
L
O
S
245 E 4th Avenue, Garnett
Wow this beautiful home has been a
staple in our community for many years.
This beautiful well-kept home on a large
corner lot w
435 S Hayes Street, Garnett, Beautiful
ranch home with picturesque window in
the front living room. This home features
3 bedrooms 1 bath and a
25502 NE 2350 Road, Garnett,
$299,900 Country living at its finest. This
very well maintained 1 1/2 story home
sits on 8.70. Lots of areas to plant your
ACT
R
garden and raise your animals. The
T
N
house has 3 bedrooms 2 full baths with CO
R
E
2 large bedrooms up, 1 bedroom on the
ND
mainUlevel
"
AMAZING BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY! 7,720 square foot
commercial building on almost 3/4
of an acre on a US Hwy. New parking
lot with widened driveway. Currently a vintage market. $375,000.
Call today and lets
"
STUNNING HISTORIC HOME! 3+bedroom, 2-bath 2-story home. Original
woodwork includes hardwood floors.
Newer kitchen, baths, central heat and
air and more. Fireplace. Basement.
Deck. Carport. Garage. Now $199,000.
Wonder what
its worth?
"
Tuesday, November 7, 2023
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Community
Foundation Board Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
Board Meeting
Wednesday, November 8, 2023
10:00 a.m. – Remember When
Wednesday
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
4:30 p.m. – Tourism Advisory Board
Meeting
6:00 p.m. – VFW Auxiliary Meeting
6:00 p.m. – VFW Post 6397 Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Parks & Recreation
Advisory Board
7:00 p.m. – Friends of the PSRT
Meeting
Thursday, November 9, 2023
8:00 a.m. – Morning Mingle
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44 Meeting
Friday, November 10, 2023
4:00 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board
Meeting
Monday, November 13, 2023
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
12:00 p.m. – GACC Board Meeting
5:30 p.m. – American Legion
Auxiliary Meeting
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Library Board Meeting
7:00 p.m. – American Legion
Meeting
GES & St. Rose 2023 Halloween Parade
"
CALENDAR
Public
Notice
8
Your RIGHT to know,
guaranteed by
Kansas Law.
Notice to creditors – Morgan Estate
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
In the Matter of the Estate of
MARGARET ROSE MORGAN, Deceased
Case No. 23-PR-300001
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
STATE OF KANSAS
COUNTY OF ANDERSON
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
SS:
You are hereby notified that on October
19, 2023, a Petition for Probate of Will and
Appointing Executor under the Kansas
Simplified Estate Act was filed in this court
by Leon J. Morgan, an heir of Margaret Rose
Morgan, deceased.
All creditors of the above named decedent
are notified to exhibit their demands against the
estate within four months from the date of the
first publication of this notice, as provided by
law, and if their demands are not thus exhibited
they shall be forever barred.
Leon J. Morgan,
Petitioner
PREPARED AND APPROVED BY:
William C. Walker, No. 11978
112 West Fifth St., PO Box 441
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3747
FAX (785) 448-5529
walkerlaw66032@yahoo.com
Attorney for Petitioner
Notice of hearing – Young Estate
(First published in the Anderson County Review
on October 31, 2023.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
PROBATE DEPARTMENT
In the Matter of the Estate of
GLADYS IRENE YOUNG a/k/a
GLADYS I. YOUNG and f/ka
GLADYS IRENE LANKARD and also f/k/a
GLADYS I. LANKARD, Deceased.
place of beginning, Anderson County, Kansas;
The West Half of the Northwest Quarter (W1/2
NW1/4) of Section Eleven (11), Township
Twenty (20), Range Eighteen (18) East of the
Sixth P.M., Anderson County, Kansas;
NOTICE OF HEARING
South Half (S/2) of the Northwest Quarter
(NW/4) and Southwest Quarter (SW/4) of
Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of Section Four (4),
Township Twenty (20), Range Eighteen (18),
LESS the following tract: Commencing at a
point 1256.4 feet South of the Northwest corner
of said Section Four (4), thence East 796 feet,
thence South 40.6 feet, thence West 796 feet,
thence North 40.6 feet to the place of beginning, all in Anderson County, Kansas;
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition
has been filed in this Court by SANDRA K.
KUESER, as heir at law of GLADYS IRENE
YOUNG a/k/a GLADYS I. YOUNG and f/ka
GLADYS IRENE LANKARD and also f/k/a
GLADYS I. LANKARD, deceased, praying for
determination of the descent of the following
described real estate:
and all other property, real and personal, or
interests therein, owned by the decedent at the
time of death; and you are hereby required to
file your written defenses thereto on or before
the 13th day of December, 2023, at 9:00 a.m.,
in the courtroom, Anderson County District
Court, 100 East 4th, Garnett, 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 South Half of the Southwest Quarter (S1/2
SW1/4) of Section Thirty-Four (34), Township
Nineteen (19), Range Eighteen (18) East of the
Sixth P.M., Anderson County, Kansas;
Case Number AN-2023-PR-000027
Chapter 59
The Anderson County Review is
the official newspaper of record for
Anderson County, The City of Garnett,
USD 365, and the other incorporated
cities in Anderson County. Notices published here meet all required statutory
legal parameters.
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, October 24, 2023.)
LOCAL
A tract beginning at the Northeast corner of the
Northeast Quarter (NE1/4) of Section Four (4),
Township Twenty (20) South, Range Eighteen
(18), thence running South 116 rods and 10.56
feet, thence West 80 rods, thence North 116
rods and 10.56 feet, thence East 80 rods to the
SANDRA K. KUESER, Petitioner
SAM H. SHELDON, Ks. Sup. Ct. #11,937
Attorney at Law
320 South Main
Post Office Box 454
Ottawa, Kansas 66067
(785) 242-1113
samsheldonlaw@gmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
oc31t3*
Public Notice of post election audit
(Published in the Anderson County Review on
November 7, 2023.)
Public Notice Post Election Audit
Per K.S.A. 25-3009, a post-election audit for
the 2023 City/School election will be held
November 9th, 2023 at 9:00 am in the Anderson
County Clerks Office. The selection for audited
races will be held on November 8th at 8:30
am in the Anderson County Clerks Office. The
selection process is open for public viewing.
Nv7t1*
Public Notice of commissioners
canvassing ballots for 11/13 election
(Published in the Anderson County Review on
November 7, 2023.)
oc24t3*
Public Notice Canvass of Ballots
The Anderson County Commissioners will can-
vass ballots for the 2023 City/School election
on November 13th, 2023 at 10:00 am in the
Commission Chambers in the Anderson County
Annex.
Nv7t1*
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
FORGET…
FROM PAGE 1
to strike, and participated
in many battles in the Pacific
following her launch in 1929.
Originally designated as a light
cruiser, she would remain so
until the installation of three
eight-inch main guns and a
change in designation to heavy
cruiser.
Houston was the flagship of
the Asiatic Fleet and stationed
in the Philippines prior to Pearl
Harbor, and aboard her at the
time was Seaman Second Class
Eldro W. Thompson of Garnett.
After several skirmishes in
the post-Pearl Harbor melee,
the USS Houston found herself
entangled with the Australian
Navy fighting Japanese insurgents in the Java Sea. Along the
Indonesian coastline she earned
a new moniker; the Galloping
Ghost of the Java Coast. S2c
Thompson enlisted after graduating from Garnett High School
and at age 21 found himself half
a world away from his parents
and family.
In the days between 27
February 1942 and 2 March 1942,
most of Thompsons story is lost
save for a few major details.
There was a battle between
the Houston, the Australian
ship Perth, and some Japanese
destroyers. Both the Perth
and the Houston were sunk.
Survivors found in the water
were captured by the enemy.
They were imprisoned at
Cabanatuan, later immortalized
in the movie The Great Raid.
No one knew for sure what
had happened to the USS
Houston and its sailors, so when
news of the ships plight was
delivered to 521 W. Third Ave in
Garnett to Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Thompson, it was only that their
son Eldro was Missing in Action.
It would not be until after the
raid that freed prisoners from
Cabanatuan in January of 1945
that the truth would be known
that the Houston had sunk with
great loss of life among its crew.
After that information
became known Mr. and Mrs.
Thompsons sons status was
changed from Missing in Action
to presumed dead 1 March 1942.
The community of Garnett
reeled from losses during those
years. Lives ended far too soon,
tragically and gruesomely. Stars
Notice of filing application for permit for recovery of saltwater
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, November 7, 2023)
Before the State Corporation Commission of
the State of Kansas
Notice of Filing Application
RE: McFadden Oil Co.
Application for a permit to authorize the
enhanced recovery of saltwater into the
Squirrel Formation Minckley 1-A, Lorance 2-A4-A, located in Anderson County, Kansas.
TO: All Oil & gas Producers, Unleased Mineral
Interest Owners, Landowners, and all persons
whomever concerned.
YOU, and each of you, are hereby notified that
McFadden Oil Co., has filed an application to
commence the injection of saltwater into the
Squirrel Formation Minckley 1-A; located 4,000
FT FSL, 700 FT FEL, NE Sec 9-23-19E,
Lorance 2-A; located 2,200 FSL 4,550 FEL,
SW Sec 10-23-19, Lorance 4-A; located
1900 FSL, 4200 FEL, SW Sec 10-23-19, in
Anderson County, Kansas, with a maximum
operating pressure of 700 psi and a maximum
injection rate of 70 bbls per day.
ANY persons who object to or protest this application shall be required to file their objections
or protests with the Conservation Division of
the State Corporation Commission of the State
of Kansas within (30) days from the date of
this publication. These protests shall be filed
pursuant to commission regulations and must
state specific reasons why the grant of the
application may cause waste, violate correlative rights or pollute the natural resources of
the State of Kansas.
ALL persons interested or concerned shall
take notice of the foregoing and shall govern
themselves accordingly.
McFadden Oil Co.
P.O. Box 394
Iola, Kansas 66749
620-496-7946
Notice of sale – Petrie
(First published in the Anderson County Review
on November 7, 2023.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Norma A. Petrie; Thomas A. Petrie and Norma
A. Petrie, Trustees, or their successors in
trust, under the Thomas A. and Norma A.
Petrie Living Trust, Dated August 23, 2001;
Unknown Spouse, if any, of Norma A. Petrie;
United States of America, Secretary of Housing
and Urban Development; John Doe (Tenant/
Occupant); Mary Doe (Tenant/Occupant)
Defendants.
Case No. AN-2023-CV-000011
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued
to me by the Clerk of the District Court of
Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
the Courthouse at Garnett Anderson County,
Kansas, on November 30, 2023, at 10:00 AM,
the following real estate:
ALL THAT PART OF THE SOUTH HALF OF
THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION
23, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 19 EAST
OF THE 6TH P.M., ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS AND BEING MORE PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT
THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE SOUTH
HALF OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF
SAID SECTION 23; THENCE SOUTH 00
DEG. 05'30" EAST, 313.28 FEET; THENCE
SOUTH 89 DEG. 08'20" WEST, 1238.82 FEET;
THENCE NORTH 02 DEG. 10'39" WEST,
312.48 FEET TO THE NORTH LINE OF
THE SOUTH HALF OF SAID SOUTHEAST
QUARTER; THENE NORTH 89 DEG. 06'00"
EAST, 1250.20 FEET TO THE POINT OF
BEGINNING. CONTAINS: 8.94 ACRES MORE
OR LESS. SUBJECT TO THE EAST 30 FEET
BEING USED FOR COUNTY ROAD RIGHT
OF WAY AND SUBJECT TO ALL OTHER
EASEMENTS AND RESTRICTIONS OF
RECORD, IF ANY. AND
ALL THAT PART OF THE SOUTH HALF OF
THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION
23, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 19 EAST
OF THE 6TH P.M., ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS AND BEING MORE PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT
A POINT ON THE EAST LINE OF SAID
SOUTHEAST QUARTER, 312.28 FEET
SOUTH 00 DEG. 05'30" EAST OF THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE SOUTH
HALF OF SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER;
THENCE CONTINUING SOUTH 00 DEG.
05'30" EAST, 620 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 89
DEG. 08'20" WEST, 352.07 FEET; THENCE
NORTH 00 DEG. 05'30" WEST, 620 FEET;
THENCE NORTH 89 DEG. 08'20" EAST,
352.07 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING.
CONTAINS: 5.01 ACRES MORE OR LESS.
SUBJECT TO THE EAST 30 FEET BEING
USED FOR COUNTY ROAD RIGHT OF WAY
AND SUBJECT TO ALL OTHER EASEMENTS
AND RESTRICTIONS OF RECORD, IF ANY
NOW CORRECTLY DESCRIBED AS:
ALL THAT PART OF THE SOUTH HALF OF
THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION
23, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 19 EAST
OF THE 6TH P.M., ANDERSON COUNTY,
nv7t1*
KANSAS AND BEING MORE PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT
A POINT ON THE EAST LINE OF SAID
SOUTHEAST QUARTER, 312.28 FEET
SOUTH 00 DEG. 05'30" EAST OF THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE SOUTH
HALF OF SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER;
THENCE CONTINUING SOUTH 00 DEG.
05'30" EAST, 620 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 89
DEG. 08'20" WEST, 352.07 FEET; THENCE
NORTH 00 DEG. 05'30" WEST, 620 FEET;
THENCE NORTH 89 DEG. 08'20" EAST,
352.07 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING.
CONTAINS: 5.01 ACRES MORE OR LESS.
SUBJECT TO THE EAST 30 FEET BEING
USED FOR COUNTY ROAD RIGHT OF WAY
AND SUBJECT TO ALL OTHER EASEMENTS
AND RESTRICTIONS OF RECORD, IF ANY,
commonly known as 21177 SW Missouri Rd,
Garnett, KS 66032 (the Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court. For more information, visit HYPERLINK "http://www.southlaw.
com/"www.Southlaw.com
Vernon L Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Prepared By:
SouthLaw, P.C.
Shari Ashner (KS #14498)
13160 Foster,, Suite 100
Overland Park, KS 66213-2660
(913) 663-7600
(913) 663-7899 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(238410)
Nv7t3*
hung in windows changed from
blue to gold all too often as news
was returned to them that their
soldier or sailor was killed in
service. Families were dragged
into the Gold Star group without want of membership, united
by the single thread that none
wanted to be tied to children
or relatives lost in war. The
Thompson story is a cautionary one because descendants of
Walter and Emma Thompson no
longer live in the Garnett area,
or are so diluted in family trees
that they do not know about the
branch they lost with the sinking of the USS Houston.
The lasting memorials for S2c
Eldro W. Thompson lie in the
community quiescently, in the
name of the American Legion
and a small headstone commemorating his life near his parents
headstone in the Thompson family plot.
With the cancellation of this
years Veterans Day assembly,
the lasting memorial to that
sailor wont be presented to the
students of Anderson County
Junior Senior High School. It
is inscribed on the flag representing American Legion Post
No 48, and without more active
membership and new members,
that flag is likely to be seen in
public far less frequently.
Not because of a lack of desire
to parade it; but due to a lack of
hands capable of doing so.
Younger veterans qualified to
man the posts in the local VFW
and American Legion but who
refuse to do so risk allowing
our community to forget the sacrifices made by our forebears.
Should they allow this link to
disappear, our modern vets
shouldnt be surprised when no
one remembers them either.
In the years after the close
of World War II, the desire not
to forget prompted local veterans to add Eldro Thompsons
name to that of another local
who gave the last full measure of
devotion in the first Great War.
The Fuller Memorial American
Legion Post 48 became the
Fuller-Thompson post, with a
mission not just to continue to
serve, but also not to forget.
Hopefully the absence of this
years ceremony will be a call to
a new era of eligible local veterans with a new commitment
never to forget.
Central Heights Friends of the FFA Auction
Saturday, November 11, 2023 @ 12:00pm.
Location: Central Heights Ag Building 3521 Ellis Rd. Richmond, Ks.
Proceeds to Benefit the Friends of the FFA Scholarship Fund
2 tons of DDG – East Kansas Agri Energy
15 ton AB3 rock – Chore-Boyz Services LLC, Ron
Peine/Delivery – Millennial Construction LLC, Kyle
& Karrie Matile
15 ton AB3 rock and Delivery – Matador Construction, Cody Burkdoll
10 bags range cubes Brummel Farm Service
1 bag F268 Hoegemeyer Forage Sorghum Seed
Asbury Agricultural Services LLC
2 – Hogs and Processing Emma/Macy Cubit
and Mont Ida Meats
Pneu Dart 8cc x dart for Pneu Dart gun – Clay
Wilson
2 – 5 L jug Normectin pour-on dewormer Busy
B Animal Clinic, Dr Steve Blythe
Small rabbit hutch – Rob & Mindy Cardell
Carhartt beanie & Boot Daddy hoodie – Rob &
Mindy Cardell
1L Shampoo and 1L Conditioner, can of Hairspray – Emily Moore @ Salon Brea
5 bags Grazermate 5, cow mineral Xtraformance Feeds, Robert Miller
$25 gift card & 2 bottles of Barbecue Sauce K&M BAR-B-Q
2 Smartlic protein tubs Beachner Grain
Rotation/Balance – Wolken Goodyear Inc
10# Hamburger – Mont Ida Meats
20# Ground Beef Santa Fe Trail Meats
1 box of Mixed Meat – Under the Shadow Ranch,
Heath and Theresa Higbie
50# Meat basket – Jack and Lisa Davis
$30 gift card – Smoked Creations BBQ
Milwaukee 3# drilling hammer, 2 packs of Inkzall
markers – Miller Hardware
Gift certificate – Garnett Flowers & Gifts
Tastefully Simple Insulated Bag with Products Jennifer Ferguson
Dewalt T-Stak (stackable tool box on wheels) Richmond Ruritans
$100 Gift Card – Family Center, Paola
TBD – Hwy 59 Station
TBD Rockin R Photography
Welding supplies Kirkland Welding Supplies
2 bags FSQ mineral Valley R Agri Service
2 Gift certificates for massage Brooke Stinson,
Main Attraction
4-$25 Gift Certificates, Sweatshirt (Sm.), Sweatshirt (3Xl) & T-shirt (Lrg.) – Brand N Iron Bar and
Grill
$25 Gift Card – Gold Rush
Gift Basket – Front Porch Antiques
31 Tote – Darla Arnett
CH Hoodie and Stocking hat – Front Row Sports
Tin of Popcorn – Maggies Popcorn
2.5 gal. hydraulic oil, diesel supplement, 1/64
ERTL toy Big Baler R & R Equipment
T-shirt – Cameron Creations – Dawn Cameron
$20 gift card – Hometown Market Place
3 Lrg pizzas, 3 personal pan, 3 breadsticks – Garnett Pizza Hut
2 – $20 Gift certificate – 4th Street Flea Market
2 – Canine Vaccine Packages – Paola Vet Clinic
Remote training collar – Tractor Supply, Ottawa
Liquid nitrogen semen tank fill – Hightower
Cattle Service LLC, Kevin Hightower
4 person golf game w/cart rental – Osawatomie
Golf Course
$25 Gift card – Kims Corner Flea Market
Decorative handmade faux windmill – PD&G Papa Dave & Granny
Lantern – Turner Flowers and Gifts
Decorated wagon wheel – New Horizons Ranch,
Brian & Joy Miller
Jar of Honey- Blends N Trends
Tastefully Simple basket – Melanie Warren
Small animal scales – Terry Thoele
Cutting board – Lucas Matile
Hedge firewood – John Cubit
Mini Photo Session- Steele House Photography-Steven Steele
20# Ground Beef – Chad and Amber Newell
FFA Student Labor
Senior FFA members will be auctioned off for
either a half or full day of work to be completed
between November 11, 2023-May 11, 2024. The
proceeds from their labor will be added to their
individual scholarship in the spring.
– Laiken Brockus
– Baker Moore
– Nash Cardell
– Caden Newell
– Colton Caswell
– Emma Cubit
– Brooklyn Daniels
– Hunter Eaks
– Marcius Englund
– Jose Velez
– Carter Kimball
– Dakota Willcut
FFA Items:
8 – Round bale Cattle feeders
21 x 12 livestock shed to be finished with the
metal colors of buyers choice
20 – 20 6 bar continuous fence panels 14 ga
2 – Firewood racks
2 picnic tables
post pullers
Class baskets
2 – barrel feed bunks
Wood shop items:
Chiefs Wooden Sign
Cow shaped cutting board
Hay:
10 – 5 x 5 round bales of fescue- CH FFA
25 – 5 x 5 round bales of prairie- CH FFA
10 small sq prairie – Matile Farms
25 small sq straw – Matile Farms
5 small sq teff – Schmucker Custom Hire, Marcus
Schmucker
Cash Donations and Auction Supply Donations:
Anderson County Review, KansasAuctions.net
Ribs by Guy and Maes Tavern, concessions available featuring homemade desserts
Auctioneers: Jack Davis and RD Kuiken
More info: Aaron Cubit 785 313 4297
Nathaniel McGee 913 209 7033
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
LOCAL
9
10
CLASSIFIEDS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
How much junk…
…is in your trunk?
Place your ad to sell your items today!
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Advertising Rates
Classified Rates:
Up to 20 Words …………………….$6.00
Each addtl word……………………..55
(Commercial) …………………………65
Class Display……………..$9.54/clm.in.
Run Of Press Rates:
Standard ROP ……………$8.72/clm.in.
Color……………………………………..$65
Pre-print inserts ……………….$158.40
Front Page
Masthead Banner (w/color) ……$300
Bottom Page (w/color)…………..$100
Statewide/multi-state ………… Quote
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classified Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL:
admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
REAL ESTATE
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
Call
(785) 448-3999
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
SERVICES
Brand New in the Box – 32
wide x 72 tall Ove Decors
Pasadena Shower Kit with pivot
frameless shower door, satin
nickel. Can be seen on Home
Depot website. Please call or
text (785) 304-2302 or (785) 3042794.
oc31tf
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
Association @ 785-271-5304 tod
ay!
Professional
Lawn
Service: Fertilization, weed
control, seeding, aeration and
mosquito control. Call now for
a free quote. Ask about our
first application special! 855288-8649.
Top Ca$h paid for old guitars! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin,
Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone,
Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker,
Prairie State, DAngelico,
Stromberg.
And
Gibson
Mandolins / Banjos. 855-4546658
Paying top Ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Got an unwanted car???
Donate it to Patriotic Hearts.
Fast free pick up. All 50 States.
Patriotic Hearts programs
help veterans find work or
start their own business. Call
24/7: 855-612-3543.
Bath & Shower Updates in
as little as one day! Affordable
prices – No payments for 18
months! Lifetime warranty &
professional installs. Senior
& Military Discounts available. Call: 855-219-8849
Low cost health insurance.
Government subsidies available for families earning
$111,000 or less a year. See if
you qualify. Call for your free
quote! 1-844-488-0570
Viagra and Cialis Users!
50 Pills Special $99.00 Free
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call Now! 844-887-7963
Medicare
plans
have
changed!!! Make sure your
plan will meet your needs in
2024. Our licensed agents can
review the changes, address
your needs and make sure you
arent overpaying! For a free
quote, Call now! 1-888-924-0449
Injured in an accident? Dont
Accept the insurance companys first offer. Many injured
parties are entitled to cash settlements in the $10,000s. Get
a free evaluation to see what
your case is really worth. 100%
Free Evaluation. Call Now:
1-888-920-1883
Aging
Roof ?
New
Homeowner? Storm Damage?
You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind
their work. Fast, free estimate.
Financing available. Call 1-877589-0093
Water Damage Clean-up and
Restoration: A small amount
of water can lead to major damage and mold in your home. If
you have water damage to your
home, call for a free estimate
for complete repairs to protect
your family and your homes
value! Call 24/7: 1-877-586-6688
Need new windows? Drafty
rooms? Chipped or damaged
frames? Need outside noise
reduction? New, energy efficient windows may be the
answer! Call for a consultation
& Free quote today. 1-866-7665558
Worlds Largest Gun Show
November 11 & 12 – Tulsa,
OK Fairgrounds. Saturday 8-6,
Sunday 8-4. Wanenmachers
Tulsa Arms Show. Free
appraisals. Bring your guns!
www.TulsaArmsShow.com
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
California Dried
Fruit & Nuts
1×2
1x1property
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
source
Chris Cygan
785-418-5435
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
wade
November 9 – November 18
7:30am-6pm Closed Sunday
Sale Location: 693 E. 1250 Rd
Lawrence
Between Ottawa & Lawrence,
just off of Hwy 59
(785) 832-1688
Cash or check only
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
LAND AUCTION
1,395 AC | 6 TRACTS | ALFALFA CO, OK,
HARPER, SUMNER & RENO CO, KS
AUCTION: LIVE & ONLINE
AT RANCHANDFARMAUCTIONS.COM
AUCTION DATE: 11/15/23 | AUCTION TIME: 1:30 PM
AUCTION LOCATION: HARPER COUNTY BLUE FAIR BARN
128 EAST 9TH STREET, HARPER, KS 67058
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
Freelance Writer/Reporter
The Anderson County Review is in search of freelance writers
who can write feature stories and cover
occasional straight news assignments.
Some experience preferred but well
train you if youve got the chops. Remote
workers okay most interviews/ research
conducted online, by phone or email. Work
from home or from our office in Garnett.
Pay is by assignment. Must follow schedules
and understand what the word DEADLINE means.
Contact publisher Dane Hicks
at review@garnett-ks.com.
ESTATE SALES
Walk-through
Estate Sale:
18759 SW Indiana Rd,
Welda, Ks., Saturday,
November 11, 2023,
8.m.-5 p.m. JD riding
lawn mower, Baldwin
Piano, refrigerator, gas
range, microwave, sewing machine w/cabinet,
end tables, lamps, bed
frames, household &
kitchen items.
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Donating a
new unwrapped toy to Toys
for Tots. Drop boxes at Garnett
Publishing, 112 West 6th.
Donations collected through
December 6.
nv7t5*
Happiness
is…
T&J
Sharpening has slightly used
carbide blades for sale, 8, 10
& 12, cleaned & sharpened
ready to go. Call (785) 448-7551
nv7t1*
Happiness is… the VFW
Auxiliary Ham & Bean
and Soup Supper! Friday,
November 10, serving at noon
and 5pm at the VFW Post. Ham
& Beans, Chicken & Noodle
and Vegetable soup, cornbread,
crackers, pies, cakes and cookies.
nv7t1*
Happiness is… Community
Breakfast Saturday, November
11, 7am-9am, Lane Community
Building. Pancakes, Biscuits
& Gravy, French toast, scrambled eggs and sausage patties.
Proceeds go for Community
Service.
Sponsored
by
Pottawatomie
Township
Ruritan.
nv7t1*
NOTICES
delph
2nd Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Happiness is . . . submitting
your FREE wedding announcement ONLINE for publication in The Anderson County
Review. Go to www.garnett-ks.
com and click the form under
Submit News. Fill in the
form and click SUBMIT.
Available FREE 24 hours/day!
oc24t
Happiness is… subscribing to
the Anderson County Review!
Call (785) 448-3121.
my19tf
Happiness is… Having the
Reviews EagleEye News
Drone do aerial photography or
videography for your wedding,
special event, property survey,
promotional video, high-altitude equipment or building
inspection, etc. Real-time view
from up to 400 feet elevation, up
to nearly 1 mile range. Contact
the Anderson County Review
at (785) 448-3121 for more info.
oc11tfn
Happiness is…shopping Garnett
Publishing for copy paper. Good
quality paper by the ream or
case. Stop by our office at 112 W.
6th today!
mc14tf
Place your ad in the
Review
review@garnett-ks.com
Commercial
Equestrian
Hobby Shops
Eastern CO
719-822-3052
S T R U C T U R E S
Nebraska & Iowa
402-426-5022
712-600-2410
Agricultural
Garages
And More!
Eastern Wisconsin
920-889-0960
Western Wisconsin
608-988-6338
Kansas &
Missouri
816-858-7040
www.GingerichStructures.com
Up t
$50 o
0
2×4 focus
BON
US!*
NOW HIRING SEASONAL HELP!
Need extra cash for the Holiday?
Sign Crew Foreman
Anderson
Countyco
is taking
applications for a
2×3 and
road
Sign Crew Foreman position until Nov. 22,
and
bridge
2023.
Applicant
must already have a Class
B CDL. Position is subject to drug testing.
Applications and job description are available
at the County Road Department, 823 W. 7th
Ave., Garnett KS. Anderson County is an
Equal Opportunity Employer and position is Veterans
Preference Eligible (VPE),
State Law K.S.A. 73-201.
TODD BIGBEE, KS AGENT: 620.518.0806
STEVE PURVIANCE, OK AGENT: 580.571.7305
R A N C H A N D FA R M AU C T I O N S .CO M
Monthly Specials
2×2 jb construction
IN COOPERATION WITH WHITETAIL PROPERTIES REAL ESTATE, LLC
IN COOPERATION WITH WHITETAIL PROPERTIES REAL ESTATE LLC | Jefferson Kirk Gilbert, Ranch & Farm Auctions (CO00002929), KS Broker Lic.
# 00237080 | Joe Gizdic, Director, Ranch & Farm Auctions, 217.299.0332 | Todd Bigbee, KS Land Specialist for Whitetail Properties Real Estate, LLC,
620.518.0806 | Brandon Hamel, Auctioneer | IN COOPERATION WITH WHITETAIL PROPERTIES REAL ESTATE LLC | Dean Anderson, OK Broker for
Whitetail Properties Real Estate, LLC, OK Lic 159163 | Joe Gizdic, Director, Ranch & Farm Auctions, 217.299.0332 | Steve Purviance, OK Land Specialist for
Whitetail Properties Real Estate, LLC, 580.571.7305
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Happiness is… California
Dried Fruit & Nuts! November
9 through November 18,
7:30am-6pm. Closed Sunday.
693 East 1250 Road, Lawrence.
(Between Ottawa & Lawrence,
just off Hwy. 59) (785) 832-1688.
Cash or check only.
nv7t1
2×4 kpa qsi
Focus Workforce Management is
currently seeking seasonal
pickers/ packers/ warehouse
associates for a large distribution
center in Ottawa, KS!
Pay up to
19/
$
hr
Shifts: Daylight/Evening/Weekend
Apply today at www.focusjobs.com or call 785.832.7000
Office location 1529 N. Davis Rd Ottawa, KS 66067
Send a friend referral bonus available!
*restrictions apply, see office for details
2×5
farmers
national co
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
LOCAL
Pieces & Patches Quilt Guild minutes for October
The Pieces and Patches
Quilt Guild was called to order
by President Connie Hatch
on Thursday, October 26th,
2023, at 9:30 a.m. The meeting was held at Kansas State
Extension Office Conference
Room. There were 21 members
in attendance.
Minutes of the September
28th, 2023 minutes were
approved as amended: the
spelling of Jennifer Birk last
name was corrected.
Helen Norman gave the treasurers report for October 26th,
2023.
Committee Reports
Programs: Program chair,
Jeanette Gadelman reported that the October program
will be Precuts and how to
use them given by Jeanette.
The November program on
November 16, 2023, will be
about Doll Quilts and presented by Phyllis Stewart, from
Wichita. Jeanette will hold
a Strip Quilt workshop on
November 9th at the extension
office, 9 am to 3 pm. There will
not be a program in December
as that is our guild Christmas
luncheon. That meeting date is
December 21st, 2023.
BOM:
Joyce
Buckley
showed a lap quilt made with
the Biscuits pattern from last
month.
Opportunity Quilt:
The
2024 quilt top is on the frame
and ready to be quilted. The
2025 quilt top is on the frame
and ready to be hand quilted.
November 2nd is scheduled as
a work day to hand quilt on the
top.
Member and Morale: Brenda
and Lori have mailed October
birthday cards and will send a
card to Joleata Kent. Thinking
of you cards have been sent to
Maggie and Barbara.
Challenge: Finished proj-
ects are due in November.
Quilters Hugs quilts: Ruth
Theis has 6 quilts in reserve
and Lori Hoyt has delivered
one quilt.
Old Business
Holiday display at the
library: Bonnie will collect
your quilted projects today and
pass them on to Terrie. The
items will be hung November
2nd starting at 10 am at the
library. Eileen, Lynda, and
Jeanette offered to help Terrie
with the hanging.
New Business
Name Cards: Connie brought
an idea of replacing the current embroidered name cards
with more of a printed design.
Jeanette offered to design new
name cards.
The possibility of developing a flyer to advertise the quilt
guild and to help new members with information was discussed.
President Connie Hatch
suggested that a review of the
bylaws might be needed to help
with committee responsibilities.
Other
Secret Sister Gifts: Bonnie
Deiter and Donna Sutton both
received Halloween cards with
an enclosed quilt pattern. Lori
Hoyt received a birthday gift
of a notion bag, and a packet of
10 different beautiful red half
yards of fabric.
Show and Tell: Many beautiful and creative quilting
projects were shared. Brenda
Futrell showed a Merry
Christmas wall hanging; a
31 yard quilt done in purples, purple prints, and solids. She also showed her first
(and possibly last) t-shirt quilt.
Marlene Cook showed three
different lap quilts; one with
KC Chiefs fabrics; one with KU
fabrics, and one with both KC
Chiefs and KU fabrics together.
Mary Parrott showed a small
wall hanging of a Christmas
tree with red buttons as the
ornaments. Lynda Feuerborn
showed a lap quilt in reds and
greens using a strip quilt pattern; a wall hanging of reindeer
on a maroon fabric with a beige
background; and a Christmas
tree skirt done in purples hexagons. Sandra Moffatt showed
a lap quilt that was a prize
from one of the quilt stores
on the All Kansas Nebraska
Shop Hop. The quilt used a
USA flag panel in the center
with blue and white rectangles
on the top and bottom. She
also showed a lap quilt made
with five different fabrics (1
yard each) done in blacks, reds,
and grays. Jeanette Gadelman
made four project bags in
assorted fabrics for her cousin. Donna Sutton showed a
Quilt of Valor lap quilt. She
11
also showed a table runner
of pumpkins on a beige background. Connie Hatch modeled
her woolen slacks that she
had made. Kathy Zimmerman
showed a wall hanging done
in reds, greens, and holiday
fabrics. Ruth Theis showed a
Quilters Hug quilt that used
lots of scrappy squares. Lynn
Wawrzewski showed a lap
quilt done in different shades
of green, and an appliqued
pumpkin and bucket table runner. Shirley Allen showed a
Quilters Hug lap quilt done in
6 scrappy squares, and a bed
quilt top made of bright colors
on a white background. The
pattern is called Warmth of our
Stars.
The meeting was adjourned.
Minutes recorded by Bonnie
Deiter
6×16 Veterans Day Sig
Brought to you by these area businesses
in appreciation of the service and sacrifice by
our veterans in commemoration of
Saturday, November 11, 2023, as Veterans Day.
Adamson Bros.
Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
Agency West Insurance
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett
(785) 448-6122
Barnes Seed Service, LLC
Garnett
(785) 304-2500
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Bluestem Farm & Ranch
Emporia
(620) 352-5502
Bones Rock Yard
Ottawa
(785) 242-3070
Flynn Appliance Center
Iola
(620) 365-2538
PSI Insurance
Iola
(620) 365-6908
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Brand N Iron
Princeton
www.thebrandniron.com
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Quality Structures
Richmond
800-374-6988
Tom Adams Construction
Garnett
(785) 448-3997
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
SEK Mental Health Center
Garnett
(785) 448-6806
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Taylor Forge
Paola/Greeley
www.tfes.com
Wittman NAPA Auto Parts
Garnett
(785) 448-6611
6th Ave Boutique &
Western Wear
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett
(785) 448-5720
CARSTAR
Ottawa
(785) 242-8916
D&M Mini Barns
Garnett
(785) 504-9625
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett
(785) 448-2888
Edward Jones Josh Nelson
Garnett
(785) 448-7171
Farmers State Bank
Garnett
www.fsbkansas.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
GSSB
Garnett/Colony
(785) 448-3111
Midwest Collision
Paola
(913) 294-4016
Midwest Gun & Supply
Paola
(913) 557-4867
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
PrairieLand Partners
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Yutzy Custom Structures
Garnett
(800) 823-8609
12
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2023
Garnett Marine turns letters from Viet Nam into family memoir
This week we have the
birthday of the United States
Marine Corps (USMC) founded on November 10, 1775 and
Veterans Day. The men and
women of Anderson County
have served honorably in all
facets of military service. No one
can fully describe what it means
to serve your country in the military, especially in time of war;
however, Joel Brummel, GHS
Class of 1959, has put in writing
as best he could his experience
of being a combat Marine officer
during Tet Offensive of 1968.
During my tour in Viet
Nam, which consisted all of
1968 and January 1969, I wrote
numerous letters to my bride,
Patty, describing my personal feelings, combat operations
and everyday details of life as a
combat Marine.
Patty
saved
all of the letters I
wrote and they
floated around in a
footlocker for 55+
years. While cleaning out the garage,
I rediscovered the
letters and felt compelled to transcribe
them for my family
and friends.
The same family and friends
encouraged me to
publish; however, I
did censor out intimate conversation
between Patty and
myself and conversation about family. Other than
that, Letters To Patty is an
exact transcript of those letters. Letters To Patty can be
found on Kindle. If you have a
smart phone, tablet or desktop
computer, you can download
Kindle for free from the app
store. Once you have Kindle,
go to Amazon and search for
Letters to Patty, by Joel
Brummel
If the Marine Corps wanted
you to have a wife, they would
have issued you one.
This was the mantra we
heard from our Drill Instructors
throughout Basic School. They
werent far off the mark. In 1968,
the Marine Corps was the least
conducive military service for
married life. Two weeks after
our wedding on June 17, 1968,
I reported in for active duty
at the Officers Basic School,
Quantico Virginia. This was a 9
month course condensed down
to 5+ months in order to supply
more front line officers to Viet
Nam. It was a demanding and
exhausting course that put an
addition strain on married officers. Upon completion, I was
assigned to Viet Nam as an
infantry officer (a Grunt).
How do you make a Grunt?
You kick a sow in the belly.
Upon arrival in Viet Nam,
I was assigned as a Platoon
Commander of 3rd Platoon,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-7-2023 / SUBMITTED
Joel Brummels graduating class from the Marine Corps officers Basic School, 1967. Brummel is 5th from the left on the third row.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
11-7-2023 / SUBMITTED
Patty and Joel Brummel
Suicide India Company,
3rd Battalion, 7th Marines,
1st Marine Division, where
we operated south of Da Nang
at An Hoa. In late February
1968, I contracted P. falciparum, malaria and was medivacked to Da Nang, then to the
Hospital Ship Repose and finally to Yokosuka Naval Hospital,
Japan. Upon recovery, I was
reprocessed back to Viet Nam
and reassigned to my old platoon. However, Capt. Chuck
Robb, President Johnsons sonin-law, was my new company
commander. As a secondary
duty, I was assigned as Capt.
Robbs XO. In July, I was made
Company Commander of Lima
Company. In August, I finally
got out of the field and given
a staff position as Assistant
Operations Officer (S3-A)
for 7th Marine Regiment.
As a secondary duty, I was
assigned Platoon Commander
of 1st Marines Scout Snipers
that were assigned to the 7th
Marine Regiment. As a result
of my actions in Viet Nam, I
was awarded the Bronze Star
and a Purple Heart.
Semper Fi
Joel Brummel is currently
retired and living in Parkville,
(Kansas City), Missouri, with
his wife Patty. They have two
children; Heidi and her husband
live in Rogers, Arkansas and
Heather and her husband and
two children live in Boulder,
Colorado.
THANKSGIVING
Meals To Go!
Call (785) 448-5711 or email
orders@dutchcountrycafe.com
re
befo 8/23
r
e
d
Or . 11/1
p.m
2:30 ick up /23
P
2
11/2
.
m
.
p
by 2
Banque t Facilitie s Mee ting Rooms Catering
Dutch Country Cafe
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
Saturday Breakfast Buffet 7:30-11:30
Brush Only Clean-Up Week
The City of Garnett will hold a free brush only pickup service to all City of Garnett refuse customers the
week of Nov. 27-Dec. 1, 2023. Brush to be accepted includes tree limbs, yard and garden debris only.
No refuse, trash, or household items will be allowed
to be mixed in with brush. If such items are bagged
or piled together with brush, then all contents provided for pick-up will not be removed.
Brush is to be piled near the alley or curbside
near where weekly trash is picked up. City crews
will begin on the north side of the city, working
their way south until the entire town has been covered. They will not return to an area once they have
been by, so please have all
brush to the alley or curbside by 7:00 a.m. on
November 27th.
2×6
Moran
Locker
Win over
$1,000
in prizes in
3×10.5
Great Christmas
GIveaway
The areas biggest Christmas
Giveaway, making your
Holidays Brighter!
Check out next weeks Review for
contest rules and start playing!
If your business would like
to be included in the
Great Christmas Giveaway
Promotion
contact the Review ASAP at
785-448-3121 today!

