Anderson County Review — October 1, 2019
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from October 1, 2019. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELDA Anderson County
Commissioners
have
approved a bid for a revised
plan to build a new fire station
at Welda one which may
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-1-2019 / BROOKE SCHETTLER
Cornstock reschedule is up in the air
GARNETT Mother Nature showed
the Anderson County Cornfest committe and a thousand or so country
music fans who was boss Saturday
night.
Organizers were forced to cancel
the outdoor concert late Saturday
afternoon as a series of storms rolled
into the area bringing heavy rains and
lightning. The concert was billed as a
rain or shine event, but safety concerns
won out among organizers in the end.
Garnett Communiy Development
Director Susan Wettstein said the
financial impact on the organizers was
substantial, since the bands had to be
paid regardless if they took the stage or
not according to their contracts.
If they are enroute to the event site
or on site, you have to pay them regardless if they take the stage, Wettstein
said. Then, theres the stage/sound
and lights, generators, porta potties,
t-shirts we sell that are in boxes unsold,
liability/liquor insurance, sales tax on
SEE CANCELED ON PAGE 2A
Julie Wettstein said commissioners approved the countys only qualifying bid for
the structure at $209,860 from
Waverly Lumber and Post
Frame Structures. One other
bid was received, Wettstein
said, but it was not a total
structure bid.
Earlier this year commissioners opted not to participate in a Community
Development Bloc Grant process to fund part of the project,
because specifics in the grant
requirements would have
added another $173,000 to the
base structure cost which was
initially estimated at some
$300,000. One of those bureaucratic requirements early on
in the preparation phase was
a Cultural Resources Survey
requested by the Osage
Nation indian tribe to ensure
no Native American history
would be adversely affected
by the project. That survey
cost the county $3,100, but
determined no historic Native
American presence in the con-
struction area.
Initial bids for the project
with those grant requirements
came in at some $494,000 up to
$558,000.
The new structure will
include vehicle bays with
doors large enough to fit modern fire equipment something the present garage-like
SEE BUILDING ON PAGE 6A
Report: State stats on child suicide
jump 50 percent from 2016-2017
TOPEKA The number of
suicides among children in
Kansas rose by 50 percent
from 2016 to 2017, according
to a report released today by
the Kansas State Child Death
Review Board.
The 32 Kansas youth who
died by suicide in 2017 was up
from 20 in 2016, representing a
2017 rate of 4.5 per 100,000 population. The sharp increase
from 2016 to 2017 continues a
troubling trend in the youth
suicide rate over the past
decade, which stood at just 1.3
per 100,000 population a decade
(785) 448-3111
BY DANE HICKS
save more than $200,000 off the
Decision to skip
cost of an original plan that
grant leads to cheaper would have required them to
seek federal grant funding.
Anderson County Clerk
construction plan
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
| review@garnett-ks.com
David Osler remains in
county jail in lieu of
$10 million bond
County will save big bucks on Welda fire station plan
BY DANE HICKS
154th Year, No. 44
Attempted
murder
charged in
incident
Trial hearing will decide
when Grippando will see
jury for Drimmel murder
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. A Missouri
man who allegedly shot and killed
21 year-old Jaiden Drimmel, formerly of Garnett, will be in court
October 21 to find out when hell
face trial on the charges.
Dylan Grippando pleaded innocent to second
degree
murder
charges
September
9 during his
arraignment
in
Buchanan
County District
Court.
Hes
Grippando charged in the
shooting death
of 21 year-old
Jaiden Drimmel during an altercation at a residence in St. Joseph
July 11.
A probable cause affidavit for
his arrest said witnesses watched
Grippando beat Drimmel with his
closed fist moments before he left
the room and returned with a hand
gun, shooting Drimmel as the victim sat on a couch in the room.
Grippando fled the residence after
the shooting, and Drimmel stumbled into the front yard where he
collapsed and died.
Both Drimmel and Grippando
had previous brushes with the
law in northwest Missouri. Court
records showed Drimmel received
a four year suspended sentence in
August 2018 after pleading guilty
to second degree burglary and misdemeanor theft in Andrew County,
Mo., just north of St. Joseph. He
served 120 days shock time
a sentencing procedure designed
to halt the activities of young
criminals while their infractions
are still relatively minor in the
Andrew County Jail.
Grippando was sentenced to
two years supervised probation
after pleading guilty to a May 2019
charge of unlawful use of a weapon.
He is being held in the Buchanan
County Jail on an $80,000 hybrid
bond, and he could face 10 to 30
years in prison or a life sentence,
should he be found guilty.
SINCE 1865
(785) 448-3121
Date to be
set for St. Joe
murder trial
BY DANE HICKS
October 1, 2019
ago.
I appreciate the dedicated work of the State Child
Death Review Board in compiling this information to
help inform policymakers on
steps to help prevent deaths
of Kansas children, Kansas
Attorney General Derek
Schmidt said. The continued
rise in youth suicides depicted in the report is alarming,
and the Legislature showed
considerable foresight earlier this year in establishing
a more-comprehensive state
SEE SUICIDE ON PAGE 2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-1-2019 / DANE HICKS
A World War II-vintage L-2 Bird Dog gets some attention at Thursdays Kansas Air Tour aircraft
display at the Garnett Airport. See more on Page 1B.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A Garnett man
accused in the shooting of one of
his
neighbors
and a subsequent standoff
with law officers
on September 22
will appear in
court this afternoon on charges
of
attempted
murder among
Osler others.
David Osler, 56
of Garnett, was charged a week
ago during his first appearance in
Anderson County District court
with first degree attempted murder,
aggravated residential burglary
and criminal threat. The charges
are in connection to an incident
late in the afternoon of Sunday,
Sept. 22, when Osler allegedly
entered the home of his neighbor,
67 year-old Robin Durand, and shot
him over a dispute.
Durand suffered non-threatening injuries and was taken to a
metro hospital, and Osler barricaded himself in his home in the 100
block of 13th Avenue and refused to
come out. Police, sheriffs officers,
highway patrolmen and a special
tactics team from Coffey County
were held at bay for some three
hours before Osler was talked into
leaving the residence and giving
up his weapon, where he was taken
into custody without incident.
Osler is being held in the
Anderson County Jail on a $10 million bond.
Man found
guilty of
defrauding
Medicaid
WICHITA A Sedgwick County
man has been ordered to repay
more than $14,000 to the Kansas
Medicaid Program after being
found guilty of Medicaid fraud-related charges, Attorney General
Derek Schmidt said.
David Callicutt, 57, of Goddard,
pleaded guilty in August in
Sedgwick County District Court to
one felony count of making a false
claim to the Medicaid Program and
one felony count of theft. Sedgwick
County District Judge Seth Rundle
last week ordered Callicutt to repay
$14,408.65 to the Kansas Medicaid
Program. Judge Rundle also sentenced Callicutt to 12 months probation with an underlying prison
sentence of six months. Convictions
such as this one may also result in
a period during which the defendant is prohibited from being
paid wages through a government
health care program.
An investigation by the attorney generals Medicaid Fraud
and Abuse Division revealed
that Callicutt, while employed by
two different Medicaid-eligible
patients, billed the Medicaid program for overlapping and excessive
home-based care services totaling
$14,408.65. The crimes occurred
between April 6, 2014, and January
26, 2016.
The case was prosecuted by
Assistant Attorney General Alma
Heckler of Schmidts office.
Life is all about perspective. The sinking of the Titanic was a miracle to the lobsters in the ships kitchen.
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
FRIENDS OF PSRT TO MEET
The Friends of the Prairie Spirit
Rail Trail will meet Wednesday,
October 9, 2019 at 7 p.m. at The
Depot.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY TO
MEET
The Anderson County Historical
Society will meet at the Welda
Community Building, Thursday,
Oct. 3rd, 6:30 p.m. for a potluck
dinner meeting. The program will
be the history of Hungry Hollow,
by Henry Roeckers. Public welcome to attend.
ST. BONIFACE BAZAAR
The St. Boniface Church Bazaar
will be Sunday, October 6th at
the St. Boniface Parish Hall in
Scipio. They will be serving from
11 a.m. – 2 p.m. Adults will be
$10, Children ages 5-10 years
old will be $5. No charge for children under 5. Carry-outs available until 1:30 p.m. for $11.
GREELEY CITY WIDE SALES
Greeley will be holding their city
wide garage sales on Saturday,
October 5th from 7 a.m. – 2 p.m.
SPENCER FAMILY MUSIC
GROUP
Everyone is invited to come and
enjoy The Spencer Family Music
group who will be performing
on Sunday, October 6th at 6:30
p.m. at the First Christian Church
located at 200 S. Walnut in
Garnett. The group is sponsored
by the local Ministerial Alliance.
There will also be a dessert potluck following the concert.
COLONY GARAGE SALE
DAY SET FOR OCTOBER
Colonys City-Wide Garage
Sales are scheduled for October
4th & 5th.
FORD CLUB TO MEET
The East Central Kansas Model T
Ford Club, ECKTS. a chapter of
the National Model T Ford Club
of America, will hold their monthly
meeting at the Burlington Library
located on Hwy 75, Thursday,
October 10 at 6:30 p.m. Well
try something new by having a
Brown Bag Meal prior to the
meeting. Bring your own sack
lunch. All meetings are open to
the public and owning a vintage
Ford is not a requirement for
membership. Feel welcome to
visit and hear about recent tours,
our 25th Anniversary celebration at the Crow Moddie Ford
Dealership and future events
being planned. For additional information call Bud Redding
785-733-2124.
SENIOR CENTER IN
SEARCH OF MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
The Garnett Senior Center is
seeking donations of used medical equipment such as: walkers, wheelchairs, scooters, beds,
shower chairs, etc. You may
drop off at the center from 9:301:30, Mon-Fri or call 448-6996 for
the item to be picked up.
SUICIDE AWARENESS
GROUP 1ST TUESDAYS
SAM – Suicide Awareness
Members, a division of SASSMoKan – meets on the first
Tuesday of the month from
6:30-7:30 at the Garnett
Library located at 125 W 4th
Ave in Garnett. The facilitator
is Lu Ann Nichols, who may
be reached at lu.ann.nichols.1956@gmail.com.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Victim Information
& Notification Everyday
(KS-VINE), is an automated victim notification service. Kansas
VINE is free and anonymous
and provides victims of crime
and the general public the ability to search for an offender
housed in a county jail and
receive notifications.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
September 23, 2019
Chairman Jerry Howarter
called the meeting of the
Anderson County Commission
to order at 9:00 AM on
September 23, 2019 at the
County Commission Room.
Attendance: Jerry Howarter,
Present: David Pracht, Present:
Leslie McGhee, Present. The
pledge of allegiance was recited. Minutes from the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester
Welsh,
Road
Supervisor, met with the
commission. Commissioner
Howarter signed the settlement
agreement and mutual release
for 1600 Rd against Coughlin
Company. The settlement
amount is for $273,715.
Rural Fire
Mick Brinkmeyer, Rural
Fire Coordinator, met with
the commission. He presented
bids for the Welda Fire Station.
The only bid received was from
Waverly Post Frame Structures
for $209,860. A bid from QSI was
incomplete and nothing was
sent from Yutzys Construction.
Commissioner Pracht moved
and Commissioner McGhee
seconded to hire Waverly Post
Frame Structures for $209,860
to build the Welda Fire Station
to be paid out of the Rural Fire
fund. All voted yes.
Emergency Management
JD Mersman, Emergency
Management Director, met
with the commission. JD discussed and presented resolution 19-20 to approve the hazard mitigation plan. This plan
allows the County to apply for
grants such as storm shelters
and allow for future funding
from FEMA during disasters.
Commissioner Pracht moved
and Commissioner McGhee
seconded to approve resolution 19-20 adopting the Kansas
Homeland Security Region J
Hazard Mitigation Plan. All
voted yes.
Anderson County Court Docket
October 1, 2019
Kevin Kimball
8:55 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. Karmen K.
Mueller
LAND TRANSFERS
Harry Conley Jr and Martha Conley
to Veronnica M Cumplido and Jorge C
Cumplido Jr: Undivided 1/2 interest in
NW/4 of 32-22-19.
Travis K Boyce, Ardena L Valdiviezo
and Ardena L Validviiezo A/K/A to Jon
W Sherbon and L Michelle Sherbon:
A tract of land lying in NWCOR
SW4 12-21-19 described as follows:
Beginning at NWCOR said quarter
section, thence south along west line
of said quarter section 300, thence
east 290, thence north 300 to point on
north line of said quarter section, 290
east of said NWCOR, thence west
along said north line 290 to POB.
Carrie L Rulon to Keith L Detwiler
and Linda C Detwiler: Lot 1 @ east 35
lot 2 block 6 Parkview Addition to City
of Garnett.
Glenda L Scheuermann and Henry
R Scheuermann Jr to Philip J Levota
and Audrey F Levota: Lots 23 & 24
block 33 City of Garnett.
Larry Peine and Sandra Peine to
Jeremy D McAdam and Kimberly A
McAdam: Lot 16 Block 52 City of
Garnett.
ANDERSON COUNTY CRIMINAL
CASES FILED
Peter Larson has been charged
with possession and/or consumption
of alcohol by a minor.
Parker Daley has been charged
with possession and/or consumption
of alcohol by a minor.
David Osler has been charged with
attempted murder in the 1st degree,
aggravated residential burglary and
criminal threat.
LIMITED ACTION CASES FILED
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against Burnt Offerings Bbq Llc in the
amount of $3,224.17 for April 2018 to
March 2019 taxes.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against Christopher Steinbrook for
$517.09 for 2018 Individual Income
Taxes.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against Justin Thompson for $807.34
for 2018 Individual Income Taxes.
The Allen County Hospital has filed
suit against Eric Bain for $740.24 plus
interest for unpaid services.
Citibank has filed suit against Orval
Stever for $9,144.32 plus costs for
unpaid goods.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Janice Rene Womelsdorf, Colony,
has filed a Petition for Divorce against
Daniel James Womelsdorf, Welda.
Jay P Childers, Lawrence, has filed
a Petition for Divorce against Monica
C. Childers, Wichita.
Almadelia Arteaga, Ft. Riley, has
filed a Petition for Divorce against
Tania Gonzalez, Los Lunes, New
Mexico.
Brandon Robert Moyer, Salina, has
filed a Petition for Divorce against
Kelly Diane Smith, Abilene.
Dakota Welsh, Garnett, and Bailey
Hoffman, Garnett, have filed for a
Marriage License.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
TRAFFIC CASES FILED
Jon Mcdowell was charged with
not having vehicle liability insurance,
$408.
Christopher Anderson was charged
with speeding 69 mph in a 55 mph
zone and with not having vehicle liability insurance, $477.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On September 19, Craig Galey,
Garnett, was booked into jail for failure
to appear.
On September 20, Karah Steinke,
Lebo, was booked into jail for failure to
appear.
On September 20, Joshua Evans,
Greeley, was booked into jail for failure
to appear, possession of certain hallucinogenics with one prior conviction
and possession of drug paraphernalia.
On September 22, David Osler,
Garnett, was booked into jail for murder in 1st degree, aggravated battery,
criminal discharge of a firearm; dwelling body harm, criminal threat and
burglary.
On September 22, Matthew Daly,
Garnett, was booked as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriff Department as
he was arrested for a warrant.
On September 23, Charles Eslick,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for possession of certain depressants with one
prior conviction.
On September 23, Ricardo
Figueroa-Perez, Linn Valley, was
booked into jail as a hold for the Linn
County Sheriffs Office as he was
arrested for possession of certain anabolic steroids with one prior conviction.
On September 23, Brandon
Smith, Lawrence, was booked as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriff
Department as he was arrested interference with a law enforcement officer;
obstruct/resist.
On September 23, Riley Wolfe, was
booked as a hold for the Douglas
County Sheriff Department as he was
arrested for battery.
On September 24, David Preston,
Garnett, was arrested for DUI; 3rd conviction in over 10 years, transporting
an open container, no vehicle liability
insurance and driving with a suspended license.
On September 25, Jerome
Provance, Butler, MO, was booked
as a hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Office.
On September 25, Steven Crotchett,
Louisburg, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for failure to
appear.
On September 25, Jason West,
Foster, MO, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for a probation violation.
On September 25, Bambi Ayres,
Pleasanton, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Office as she was arrested for failure
to appear.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Jon Leatherman was booked into
jail on February 21, 2019.
Harley Crook was booked into jail
on April 1, 2019.
Joseph Daulton was booked into jail
on April 24, 2019.
Gary Henning was booked into jail
on April 25, 2019.
Jake Magner was booked into jail
on May 20, 2019.
Stephanie Knavel was booked into
jail on June 22, 2019.
Nathan Thompson was booked into
jail on June 28, 2019.
Darren Dicenzo was booked into jail
on July 22, 2019.
Jessica Orange was booked into jail
on July 28, 2019.
Brandon Ellsmore was booked into
jail on August 15, 2019.
Tina Prater was booked into jail on
August 21, 2019.
Brian Gedrose was booked into jail
on September 6, 2019.
Angela Anderson was booked into jail
on September 11, 2019.
Dale Easly was booked into jail on
September 13, 2019.
David Osler was booked into jail on
September 22, 2019.
David Preston was booked into jail
on September 24, 2019.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL
FARM-INS ROSTER
Jimmy Miller was booked into jail on
January 5, 2018.
Christopher Conner was booked
into jail on April 24, 2019.
Steven Vickrey was booked into jail
on May 10, 2019.
Shawn Maxwell was booked into jail
on May 15, 2019.
Paige Flanery was booked into jail
on June 10, 2019.
Vaughn Burns was booked into jail
on July 10, 2019.
Robert Brierley was booked into jail
on June 21, 2019.
Kevin Davis was booked into jail on
August 7, 2019.
Matthew Lang was booked into jail
on August 19, 2019.
Robert Kraxner was booked into jail
on August 19, 2019.
Jared Atchison was booked into jail
on August 21, 2019.
Seth Daniels was booked into jail on
August 21, 2019.
Kevin Kimbrough was booked into
jail on August 28, 2019.
Dalton Bobek was booked into jail
on September 6, 2019.
Jeremy Taylor was booked into jail
on September 12, 2019.
Anthony Edwards was booked into
jail on September 17, 2019.
Brandon Smith was booked into jail
on September 24, 2019.
Riley Wolfe was booked into jail on
September 24, 2019.
Charles Eslick was booked into jail
on September 24, 2019.
Ricardo Figuero was booked into
jail on September 24, 2019.
Steven Crotchett was booked into
jail on September 25, 2019.
Jason West was booked into jail on
September 25, 2019.
Jerome Provance was booked into
jail on September 25, 2019.
Bambi Ayers was booked into jail on
September 25, 2019.
CCH plans
service member
gift boxes
BURLINGTON You can easily brighten the day of a local
soldier stationed overseas!
For the eleventh year,
Friends of Coffey Health
System is compiling care packages to send to local troops
stationed overseas, including
canine units.
Everyday items such as toiletry/hygiene items; snacks;
playing cards; crossword/
Sudoku books; gently-used
magazines, CDs & books; and
leftover Halloween candy are
greatly appreciated by service
men and women deployed
overseas.
Additional names and
addresses are also being
sought of military personnel
who are stationed overseas.
If you know of someone who
should receive one of these
care packages, call the project coordinator Linda Booth
at (620) 364-8015 or the hospital
gift shop at 364-2121 Ext. 4267.
Donald Smith to celebrate 90th
Donald L. Smith turned 90
on September 29th!
Come celebrate with him on
Saturday, October 5th from 2
p.m. until 4 p.m. at the Garnett
Senior Center.
His address to send a card is
105 Park Plaza N. #19.
SUICIDE…
in the rate of youth suicide,
the overall child death rate of
55.6 deaths per 100,000 population in 2017 remained near the
record-low rates that have been
reported the past four years.
The report showed that Kansas
had 396 child fatalities in 2017,
compared with 394 each of the
previous two years.
While it is promising to see
that the overall death rates are
decreasing for Kansas children,
the number of youth suicides
remain a concern, said Sara
Hortenstine, the boards executive director. The information
provided within this report
should continue to inform individuals, organizations, and the
State of Kansas as a whole to
continue prevention efforts
surrounding child fatalities in
our state.
In addition to policy recommendations, the report
includes prevention points that
families can use to decrease the
likelihood of a childs death.
The board is a multi-disciplinary, multi-agency volunteer board organized by law
within the Attorney Generals
Office to examine trends and
patterns that identify risk factors in the deaths of children,
from birth through 17 years of
age.
The report is available on
the attorney generals website at http://bit.ly/2lJAFPF.
A copy of the Youth Suicide
Prevention Task Force report
is also available at https://
ag.ks.gov/ysptf.
FROM PAGE 1
response.
In June 2018, Schmidt and
the Tower Mental Health
Foundation formed the Youth
Suicide Prevention Task Force
to survey efforts underway in
Kansas to reduce the incidence
of youth suicide and provide
recommendations on further
steps that could be taken. In
May, the Legislature adopted
several of those recommendations by passing the conference
committee report on House Bill
2290, which created the Kansas
Youth Suicide Prevention
Coordinator to implement
recommendations of the task
force. In August, Schmidt
appointed Gina Meier-Hummel
to serve as the states first coordinator.
Every time a child takes his
or her own life it is heartbreaking, and this report underscores the need to collectively
address the pain Kansas youth,
families and communities are
feeling, Meier-Hummel said.
I take this responsibility very
seriously and am encouraged
by the early response from
statewide partners about working together, streamlining our
efforts and strengthening our
overall response to youth suicide in Kansas.
The State Child Death
Review Boards 2019 annual
report analyzes all child deaths
that occurred in calendar year
2017, the most recent year
for which data is available.
Despite the troubling increase
CANCELED…
FROM PAGE 1
tickets sold things like that.
Due to a significant weather threat that was brought to
the attention of the Board of
Directors for the Cornstock festival, the event was cancelled
late Saturday afternoon, a
statement from the committee read. It is unknown if a
reschedule is possible at this
time with the entertainment,
but the producer has been
asked to investigate all possibilities.
The 15th year of the
Anderson
County
Corn
Festival, aka Cornstock
met with significant wind on
Friday, continuing into rain
and lightning on Saturday,
September 28th. Meeting with
Anderson County Emergency
Management and several communications with the National
Weather Service, it was determined that the safety of the
potentially large crowd should
be first priority and the predictability of severe weather,
including the possibility of
lightening, hail and strong
winds during the peak hours
of the concert were slated at 80
to 100 percent.
It was perhaps one of the
toughest decisions this Board
has ever had to make, and one
not taken lightly, said Gina
Witherspoon, president of
ACCF. Our goal is to have
a full concert of happy people enjoying great music and
supporting local charities. It
takes an entire year of hard
work and gathering support to
make the event possible. If the
entertainment arrives on site,
they must be paid even if never
taking the stage. A great deal
of money went out for expenses beyond just entertainment
for an event that didnt take
place.
The festival board is now looking at their financials and
meeting with the producers to
see what the options are, if
any. For announcements and
further developments please
visit the festivals social media
and their website, www.cornstock.net.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
Visit Iola & Allen County!
These4x5
Iola Iola/Allen
and Allen County
businesses appreciate your patronage
Co Guide
and encourage you to visit your local merchants in Allen County!
Flynn Appliance & Hi-Def Center
11 N. Jefferson IOLA (620) 365-5940
M-F 8-6 / Sat 8-1
Best selection of
Home Appliances.
Flat Panel Televisions
Plasma & LCD
IOLA PHARMACY
109 E. Madison IOLA
(620) 365-3176 or (800) 505-6055
Your hometown full line full service pharmacy.
Free delivery in Iola.
24-hour Prescription Services
VoiceTech Automated Prescription Refill Service
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(620) 365-5232
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See us for all your insurance needs.
MOUND CITY OFFICE
IolaUngeheuer
David
837-7825
(620)(913)
365-6908
Senior & Member
Discounts
Gluten Free Foods
To advertise your
business here,
call Stacey at
(785) 448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
BROWN
COX
SEPTEMBER 25, 1947 – SEPTEMBER 22, 2019
Howard Lyle Brown, age 71,
of Richmond, Kansas, passed
away on Sunday, September 22,
2019 at his home.
He was born September 25,
1947, in Ottawa, Kansas, the son
of Howard and Grace (Phillips)
Brown.
Lyle married Virginia
Robertson and they later
divorced. He then married Sondra Chambers on
September 16, 1995.
Funeral services were
Thursday, September 26, 2019,
at Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett.
Burial followed in Richmond
Cemetery.
A part of us needs God!
JULY 24, 1933 – SEPTEMBER 23, 2019
Bertha (Betty) A. Boehm
Cox of Ottawa, Kansas, passed
away on Monday September 23,
2019, at Rock Creek of Ottawa
at the age of 86.
She was born July 24, 1933,
in Lenexa, Kansas, the daughter of Oliver and Rosa (Bross)
Boehm. Betty married Harvey
Eugene Cox in 1950.
Funeral services were
Friday, September 27, 2019,
at Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett,
Kansas. Burial followed at
Resurrection Cemetery in
Lenexa, Kansas.
BENNETT
GIFFORD
NOVEMBER 25, 1941 – SEPTEMBER 23, 2019
APRIL 8, 1932 – SEPTEMBER 26, 2019
William Edwin Gifford
(Bill), age 87, passed away from
complications due to leukemia, on September 26, 2019, in
Stavanger, Norway.
Bill was born April 8, 1932 on
a farm 5 miles east of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas to
Robert Luther and Clara Doris
Sours Gifford. When he was 4
years old the family moved to
a farm just outside Fountain,
Colorado. Four years later they
moved back to Anderson, Co.,
Kansas. He attended three different one room schools while
growing up and graduated
eighth grade at Irving school
in Garnett. He graduated from
Garnett High School in 1950.
In December 1951 he joined the
United States Coast Guard for
three years military service.
In the spring of 1955 at
Odessa, Texas, Bill started a
career in oil and gas drilling
that would eventually take him
to five different continents and
twelve countries. In 1975, on
his second move to Norway, he
met Gro Jansen, a young office
manager for a Norwegian oil
company. They were married
October 29, 1976. To this union
one daughter, Isabelle, was
born July 22, 1978. The family
lived in Stavanger from that
time on and Bill took many
different jobs in the oil industry, until January 1987 when he
hired out to Phillips Petroleum
Co. Norway as a drilling supervisor. He retired from Phillips
in September 1997, and he
and Gro moved to Garnett,
Kansas. Isabelle was studying at University of Kansas.
They lived there for 18 years.
During this time, Isabelle and
her husband moved to Norway
and started a family there; Bill
3A
REMEMBRANCES
followed in October 2015, without his wife, who passed away
during the preparations for the
move.
An avid golfer, Bill could
often be found at the driving range or playing on the
course at Garnett Country
Club or Stavanger Golfklubb
with fellow golfers and friends.
He joined the Norwegian Oil
Pioneers Club in 2016, due to
being a part of the first group of
people to work in the oil industry in Norway in the 1960s. He
was also an active member of
the Kincaid Masonic lodge,
just passing 50 years service;
among other offices he served
twice as Lodge Master and
once as District Deputy Grand
Master. He was also active in
the Mirza Shrine. Bill was a
doting grandparent; despite not
understanding Norwegian so
well, he spent countless hours
watching his grandchildren in
different school productions
and activities.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, his wife Gro
(Sept. 29, 2015), one brother,
Robert Jr., one sister, Edna,
two brothers-in-law, one sisterin-law and two nieces.
He is survived by daughter
Isabelle (Noel), granddaughter
Kaja, grandson Felix, brother Gerald (Dianna), sisters
Margaret Briggs and Wilma
Gibbs, brother-in-law Sid
Fluke, and many nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services and burial
will be held October 3rd, 2019
at Eiganes Kapell in Stavanger,
Norway. Donations may be
made in his memory to any
Masonic or Shriners charitable
foundation.
He will be missed dearly.
Benny Edward Bennett, age
77, of Ottawa, Kansas, passed
away at his home near Ottawa,
on Monday, September 23, 2019.
Ben was born on Tuesday,
November 25, 1941, at Carters
Hospital in Garnett (Anderson
County), Kansas. He was born
to Ellsworth Harold Bennett
and Emma Lucille (McLees)
Bennett.
He married Delores Wogan.
This marriage was later dissolved.
On April 26, 1968, Ben was
united in marriage to Marilyn
Nilges.
Funeral services were
September 27, 2019 at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel in Garnett.
Burial followed in the Garnett
Cemetery.
Fusion Alley
2×4
Senior
Fusion AlleyLeague
bowling
Oct. 2 Sign up/Meeting 11:30 a.m.
First game Oct. 9 at 12 noon
Sign up as an individual or team of three.
Call for details:
(785) 242-2695
Life
exists
on
two
planes-horizontal and vertical.
The horizontal relationship is
what goes on between you and
your spouse, you and a close
friend or co-worker, what goes
on with your family. We can
speak of life on the horizontal
plane as life together. It can
be rich, full and rewarding or it
can be complicated, lonely and
disappointing. Life on the horizontal plane leaves us at the
mercy of our circumstances.
The vertical relationship is
between you and God. We sing,
pray and study Gods word. We
constantly struggle with Gods
will or our will in our lives. We
fight to believe and trust God.
Far too often worries, heartache, and demands plague our
thoughts, They grind us down
and leave us empty of the one
thing our soul craves, communion with God.
God created us for fellowship with him. God created
us in his image. In fact in
Genesis 1:26 we are told. Then
God said, Let us make man
in our image, in our likeness,
and let them rule over the fish
of the sea and the birds of the
air, over all the livestock, over
all the earth, and over all the
creatures that move along the
ground. If we are made like
God it only stands to reason a
part of us needs communion
with our creator. Sadly we
can go through our day, talk
to our family, co-workers, do
our daily chores, finish a project at home or work, spend
the evening with our family
and the Lord barely touches our life. We let our busy,
struggling life push God to
the periphery. We struggle to
be faithful with all God has
entrusted to us, money, work,
relationships and church. But
ANDERSON
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
we cannot let these horizontal dynamics become primary
in our life. Allowing this to
happen is idolatry, the things
of the world become first in
our life while God is relegated to second place. As I said
living on the horizontal plane
leaves us at the mercy of our
circumstances which plague
our thoughts, dictate our fears,
shape our goals and drive our
emotions. This is not the way
God intended for us to live.
The only way off the horizontal plane and onto the vertical
plane is to place your faith in
Jesus Christ as your personal
Savior. When you begin to
truly believe Jesus is greater
than all your problems you are
truly on the vertical plane
.
Ministry on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback
on Facebook
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
JEFFS TOWING & RECOVERY
4×12.5
We Can Hook You Up!
Flatbed Services, Winch Outs,
biz
directory
Jump Starts
HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS Lock Outs &MIKE
2×2
Reeble
Iola Location:
202 S. State St.
Iola, KS 66749
620-363-5005
Emporia Location:
1 S Commercial St.
Emporia, KS 66801
620-342-5573
Ottawa Location:
233 W 23rd St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-229-0684
Tire Changes Sales & Service
COLOR PRINTERS
Jeff
Chandler
– Owner
NETWORK
PRINTERS
1110
E. 4th Terr.
785-433-5470
NETWORK
SCANNERS
Garnett,
KS 66032
jeffstowing1669@yahoo.com
FACSIMILE
Office
& Impound Lot
24/7 Service
(785) 448-5856
448-5856
(785)
110 W.
W. 5th
5thAve.
Ave. Garnett
Garnett
110
Tues.
– Thur.
11 a.m.
– 11 p.m.
Mon.
5 p.m.
– 10 p.m.
Fri. -&Thur.
Sat. 11 a.m. – 2
Tues.
11a.m.
p.m.
Daily
Specials
Fri. & Sat.
11
a.m. – 2 a.m.
Lunch -Delivery
M-F M-F
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Classied ads
only three dollars.
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
Dont justWEEK
sit there… place
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(800) 683-4505
Garnett,
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(785) 448-3212
ads@tradingpostdeals.com
2×4
St. Boniface Church
St. Boniface
Fall Bazaar
Sunday, October 6, 2019
Church
N. Hwy. 59 Garnett
(785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Anderson E-Statements &
County
Aaron Lizer News Online Banking
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
Drawings Fancy Stand Bake Sale Quilt Raffle
Bingo Pumpkin Sales Priory Dinner Raffle
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Agent
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
Dinner served from 11:00 am until 2:00 pm
Sunday, October 20, 2019
Turkey, Roast Beef, Chicken & Noodles,
Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans,
Kraut, Apple Salad,
Homemade Bread & Homemade Pies.
Craft/Bake Sale
$9.00 Adults $5.00 for 10 and under
$12.00 take out meals
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
THE SMART CHOICE
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Anderson
County
News
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
2×4
St. Rose School 520 E. 4th Ave., Garnett
Holy Angels
(Handicapped
parking in the back of the school)
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
213 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Mon-Fri
8:00am.
Phone:
(785) 448-6125
Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Adults: $10.00 Children 5-10 Years: $5.00
Under 5: No Charge Carry-Outs Available: $11.00 (until 1:30)
aar
Mon – Fri
8:00am
785-448-3056
Roast Beef, Mashed Potatoes & Gravy,
Chicken & Noodles, Green Beans, Sauerkraut,
Salads, Homemade Bread and Homemade Pies.
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Serving: 11am – 2pm
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(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
120 S. Maple
Garnett, KS
wiseautoks.com
785-448-2171
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Dirty
Deeds
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Done dirt cheap.
(785) 448-3121
Millers Construction, Inc.
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
Since 1980
Cooper
Jetzon
Kumho
Delden
Doors & Openers
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
Licensed Electricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
Quality Service For
Over 20 Years.
Serving Anderson
& Franklin Counties.
Ask how to advertise in this space
for only
Garnett, KS
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
Providing quality
products and service
$16 per week!
Contact Stacey at
785-448-3121.
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
OPINION
Trump takes needed steps with China
News that China has reduced tariffs on
soybeans and pork, supposedly as a goodwill gesture ahead of renewed trade talks in
Washington next month, should be welcome.
In return, President Trump put off his next
round of planned tariff increases on Chinese
goods. We hope this gets these difficult negotiations off to a good
start.
In trade,
the Chinese have
operated on the
theory that whats
mine is mine, and
whats yours is
mine.
Most
of
the benefits moved
one way, as China
ripped off western
intellectual property, everything
from rock music to
fashion design and
technology.
Trade surpluses piled up as
the west bought
cheap
consumer goods made in
China and China
bought relatively
little of what we
grow or make here.
Was the playing
field even? Of course not.
But the Trump administration has put great
pressure on China to make a more straightforward trade deal. That it hasnt happened yet
only shows how tough a situation this is.
China is used to getting its way, and the
Chinese seem willing to give advantage only
inch by inch. Most Americans, we think,
understand this. They know weve been taken
advantage of, and that this hurts our economy.
But while fairness may be one of our principle
values, it doesnt seem to be one of Chinas.
We urge the president to stand by his prin-
Trade
surpluses piled
up as the west
bought cheap
consumer
goods made
in China and
China bought
relatively little of what we
grow or make
here.
GUEST COMMENTARY
STEVE HAYNES, Haynes Publishing Co.
ciples here and do what it takes to get a good
and fair trade deal for all sides. We recognize
this could take a little more time.
At the same time, we want him to know
that our economy, particularly on the farm,
is hurting and the nation, the world perhaps,
cannot afford to take too long. The economy is
slowing, and recession threatens if trade does
not get back to normal levels.
We should point out that the Chinese
may not be acting solely out of benevolence
when they say theyll cut tariffs and allow
more imports of soybeans and pork. Lack of
American soybeans has hurt Chinese pork
producers, news reports say, and theyve
already been hurt by African swine flu, which
killed many animals.
So, China needs both feed and food.
But thats the way it should be: if one
country has something another needs, then
trade, and both will grow and prosper. Trade
has greatly benefited the U.S. economy and
Chinas. Now both are slowing down.
We do not need a trade deal to gain advantage over our adversary. We both need trade to
continue the stream of prosperity weve both
enjoyed. This trade war is destructive. It only
hurts both economies.
So the sooner we can wrap it up and sign an
agreement good for both countries, the better.
Steve Haynes is president of NorWest
Newspapers in Oberlin, Kan.
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.
Thank goodness for the counties that take recycling and the environment seriously. Franklin
and Coffey counties have and still do accept all
types of plastic at their recycling centers. It is
unfortunate that not all counties care enough
to make recycling work.
The guy talking about sirens and lights on
firetrucks and emergency vehicles, that is a
lie. Nowhere, and Im readig the law of Kansas
here, does it say they have to have both sirens
and lights on. Even for firetrucks it doesnt say
that. It says firetruck lights are required by
law, and thats all it says. Absolutely nothing
Both impeachment efforts in U.S. history failed
With all the talk of impeachment, it is time
once again to explain exactly what impeachment is and also to look at it historically. The
important things to remember are that, one,
impeachment does not mean removing a sitting president; two, we have never removed
a president before; and three, impeachment
is very difficult because it is political. Both
impeached presidents actually did what they
were accused of, but neither were removed.
First things first, Article II, Section 4,
of the Constitution reads, The President,
Vice President and all civil officers of the
United States, shall be removed from office on
impeachment for, and conviction of, treason,
bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors. The tricky part of the clause is impeached
for and CONVICTION of. It is a two-part process; you are first impeached and, second,
put on trial. The House of Representatives
impeaches a president and then the Senate,
with the Chief Justice presiding, conducts the
trial.
Two presidents have been impeached,
Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton, but neither
were removed for office. I can already hear the
question, so I will answer it. Richard Nixon
was not impeached; he resigned. He probably
would have been impeached and probably
would have been convicted. However, I use the
word probably because in politics we never
really know. Again, I believe both Johnson
and Clinton did what they were accused of, yet
neither was removed.
First, let us look at the example most are
unfamiliar with, Andrew Johnson. Johnson
became president after the death of Abraham
Lincoln. Johnson was in a difficult circumstance; he was not Lincolns V.P. for
his first term and was brought in to help
Lincoln secure votes for reelection. What
made Johnson interesting was that he was a
slave-holding Democrat from Tennessee, who
believed secession was illegal. The Democrats
GUEST COMMENTARY
JAMES FINCK, USAO HISTORIAN
were arguing for peace, so Lincoln hoped
that Johnson would secure possible northern
Democratic voters who wanted to continue
prosecution the Civil War.
Johnson was never supposed to reach the
highest office but when he did the Republicans,
who controlled the Congress, feared Johnsons
lenience on the South after the war, as well as
replacing Lincolns Republican cabinet with
Democrats. To prevent the first, Congress
made sure he could not do the latter. In 1867
Congress passed, over Johnsons veto, the
Tenure of Office Act that stated the president
could not remove any member of his cabinet
without Senate approval. When the president
fought with Secretary of War Edwin Stanton
over the armys role in Reconstruction,
Johnson replaced him. Johnson was hoping
this would challenge the Act and take it to the
Supreme Court. Instead, the Congress acted
first and brought up articles of impeachment.
Long story short, Johnson broke the law,
one later repealed, but he still broke the law
as it currently stood. When the Senate voted,
they fell one vote short of the required vote
for conviction. All the Democrats and enough
Republicans felt the trial was a sham.
It took 102 years for the next impeachment
hearings. In 1998, the House of Representatives
approved two articles of impeachment against
President Bill Clinton. The charges were
lying under oath to a federal grand jury and
obstructing justice. Kenneth Starr, a special prosecutor investigating Clinton for the
Paula Jones and Whitewater scandals, learned
of Clintons affair with Monica Lewinsky.
Lewinsky, allegedly instructed by the president, filed an affidavit in which she denied
ever having had a sexual relationship with
him. Clinton then denied the affair to a grand
jury. When Lewinsky later changed her testimony, Clinton was forced to admit the affair
and the House started to debate impeachment.
After a five-week trial, the Senate acquitted
Clinton on both charges. Officially, the acquittal came because of legal wrangling over the
definition of sex. Unofficially, it is because the
American people saw this trial more about the
morality of an affair than the legality of lying.
Immorality was superseded by a strong economy and politics.
If Watergate happened after the Clinton
trial, maybe Nixon would have remained in
office and fought his removal. With only the
Johnson precedent, Nixon probably felt his
presidency was doomed. Yet what we see is that
politics are fickle. Like it or not, in my opinion
both previous presidents broke the law. In
both cases, the party that brought the charges
had the majority in the Senate, yet they were
unable to get a conviction. Therefore, historically speaking even if Democrats in the House
decide to impeach, and that is not a foregone
conclusion, the chance of conviction is minimum to none.
Dr. James Finck is an Associate Professor
of History at the University of Science and Arts
of Oklahoma and Chair of the Oklahoma Civil
War Symposium. Follow Historically Speaking
at www.Historicallyspeaking.blog or Facebook
at @jamesWfinck.
Greta Thunberg rant is alarmist child theater
Greta Thunberg needs to get a grip.
The celebrity teen climate activist
addressed the United Nations and excoriated
the assembled worthies for coming to us
young people for hope. How dare you! You
have stolen my dreams and my childhood with
your empty words.
Someone may have stolen her childhood,
but the guilty parties cant be found at Turtle
Bay. A 16-year-old from Sweden, Thunberg
thundered, I should be back at school on
the other side of the ocean, which would
have been easy enough to achieve, beginning
with not taking two weeks to sail across the
Atlantic last month in a jet-travel-eschewing
publicity stunt.
Greta Thunberg is the leading edge of a
youth movement against climate change that
is being promoted and celebrated by adults
who find it useful for their own purposes.
Kids are powerful pawns. The catchphrase
for the children has a seductive political
appeal, while kids offer their adult supporters
a handy two-step. The same people who say,
The world must heed this 16-year-old girl
will turn around and say to anyone who pushes back, How dare you criticize a 16-year-old
girl.
Theres a reason that we dont look to teenagers for guidance on fraught issues of public
policy: Kids have nothing interesting to say to
us. They just repeat back what theyve been
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
told by adults, with less nuance and maturity.
Much of their climate advocacy boils down
to the plaint that all parents know well: I
want it, and I want it now. As a National
Geographic headline put it, Kids world climate strikes demand that warming stop, fast.
Behind the foot-stomping is the idea that
a long-running global phenomenon can be
quickly stopped, if only adults cared as much
as the kids. This fails to account for such recalcitrant factors as costs and complexity, but
when do children ever think of those? (And
who can blame them? Theyre children.)
Instead, the youthful climate activists claim
theyve been sold out by their elders. Greta
Thunberg put it with her usual accusatory
starkness at the U.N.: You are failing us, but
young people are starting to understand your
betrayal.
This is laughable. By no global measure of
social and economic well-being have we failed
kids. According to HumanProgress.org, the
global poverty rate fell from 28% in 1999 to
11% in 2013. Life expectancy increased from
63.2 years to 71.9 years from 1981 to 2015. The
same benign trends hold for hunger, child
labor, literacy and so on.
If climate change proves a significant challenge, todays youth will have more resources
and technology to grapple with it than any
other generation in the history of mankind.
Of course, the adults they listen to dont tell
them any of this. Instead, they feed the kids
a diet of apocalyptic warnings that children
repeat back as if they were urgent insights.
One speaker at the youth climate rally said
we have just 18 months — yes, only until the
beginning of 2021 — to forestall irreversible
environmental harms.
This is nuts, and its the adult enablers who
are ultimately responsible. As for the kids,
theyll be all right. One day, they will grow up,
even in a warming world.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
about sirens. Thank you.
Hi I think people need to stop raking the
Cornstock committee over the coals about canceling the concert the other night due to the
weather. All it would take would be for one
person to get hit by lightning out there to have
a major tragedy that would be way worse than
canceling a concert. You get someone killed out
there the Cornstock committee and probably the
city gets sued, and the whole thing will be over
with from that point forward. I think people
need to show a little tolerance and some mature
understanding about the kind of responsibility
that people in leadership positions have to take
in situations like this. Thank you.
Dane, please dont take away the Phone Forum.
Thats the first think I turn to when I get the
paper. Just because the Rockers family dont
care for it, they dont have to read it thats only
two people. Im sure the people that do like it will
out number the people that dont. Besides the
Forum does good. I remember seeing the location
of a bad pothole in the Forum, the next week it
was fixed. I saw one time where the base of the
flag pole needed fixed at the cemetery. I noticed
it had been fixed this Memorial Day. I think
the city workers just need to know what needs
to be done. The Phone Forum gives me a smile.
Everyone needs a good laugh every once in a
while. PS I always read your article.
Contact your elected leaders:
President Donald Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
@realDonaldTrump
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774,
pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
2nd Dist. Congressman
Steve Watkins
1205 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-6601
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
5th Dist. Rep. Mark Samsel
300 SW 10th St. Rm 168-W
Topeka, Ks. 66612
(785) 296-6287
Mark.Samsel@house.ks.gov
I feel sorry for people who dont drink.
When they wake up in the morning, thats
as good as theyre going to feel all day.
Dean Martin
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2018.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
5A
LOCAL
Lending and farm program resource
guide for veterans released
Mid 1800s revolver bullet discovered
DIGGING UP THE PAST
On
the
The origin
31st of July
of the .36 Cal.
2019 I paid a
Navy Bullet
visit to a site
can be traced
where sevto the Federal
eral Kansas
Arsenal
at
Militia Men
St.Louis,
resided in the
Mo. The St.
mid 1800s.
Louis Arsenal
Henry Roeckers
This litCall (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
tle
pistol/
revolver bullet was my last find of the day produced more
and my last find before my fall revolver cartridgand back injury.
es than any other
It really is a great little find. Federal Arsenal
The .36 Caliber Navy pistol during the Civil
bullet or Remington Tear War.
Drop or Pot Belly has been
Technically
recovered in large numbers any
.36
Cal.
from Calvary sites in the Navy percussion
Western Theater of the Civil revolver
could
War.
fire the St. Louis
This bullet is much less com- Tear Drop bullet.
mon in the Eastern Theater of
Examples were
Operations.
the Savage and
Leech & Reardon revolvers.
These bullets were used by
both the North and the South
during the Civil War.
LYONS, NEBRASKA With
the average age of a U.S. farmer
Respectfully submitted by: at nearly 60 years, and millions
Henry Roeckers 19Sept2019 of acres expected to change
hands over the next few years,
many Americans are thinking
about who the next generation
of producers will be. Veterans
could step in to fill the need,
according to a white paper
released today by the Center
for Rural Affairs.
Saluting Service: A Guide
to Lending and Farm Program
Resources for Veterans,
authored by Cora Fox, highlights the needs of Americas
next generation of producers,
which includes individuals
who served their country and
who are now pursuing a second
career in agriculture.
Public Notice
Your
RIGHT
Public notice of Anderson County
Fair Board annual meeting
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September, 24, 2019)
to know.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice of hearing
regarding a name change
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given in accordance
with Anderson County Fair Board Constitution
and By-Laws, that on Monday, October 7 at
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 24, 2019)
IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF
Mary Louise Ashton
Present Name
To Change His/Her Name to:
Mari Louise Ashton
New Name
Case No. 2019-CV-000032
PURSUANT TO K.S.A. CHAPTER 60
ANNUAL MEETING ANDERSON COUNTY
FAIR BOARD
NOTICE OF HEARING-PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL WHO ARE
OR MAY BE CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that Mary Louise Ashton
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(First published in the Anderson County
Review September 24, 2019)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Susan G. Robie, Deceased
Case No. 19 PR 26
(Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59)
Fast, an heir of Susan G. Robie, deceased.
All creditors are notified to exhibit thei
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 foreve
barred.
/s/Amber Fast
APPROVED BY
John L. Richeson, #06197
ANDERSON & BYRD, LLP
216 S. Hickory, P.O. Box 17
Ottawa, Kansas 66067
(785) 242-1234
Attorney for Petitione
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are notified that on September 18, 2019,
a Petition for Probate for Issuance of Letters
of Administration under the Kansas Simplified
Estates Act was filed in this Court by Amber
Ottawa
sp24t2*
,Ottawa
Jeff & Lou Baker
Owners/Operators
402 N. Main 785-242-8916
Relax, well take it from here.
Country Favorites
Listen to
Anderson
County Today!
Mon-Fri:
8:00am
D&S DOOR
Dales Body Shop
(785) 242-4814
Mobile: (785) 229-6694
785-242-6225
The areas rst and best!
E S TA B L I S H E D 1 9 7 6
Garage Doors Openers Service Calls
RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL
sp24t3
Day, Night, Weekend, Online
Visit www.neosho.edu
Suttons Jewelry
424 S. Main Ottawa
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
East side of historic
downtown OTTAWA
Rod Ball
785-242-3723
PAINT WALLPAPER
CUSTOM WINDOW BLINDS
CUSTOM FRAMING & SUPPLIES
Fine Senior Living.
701 S. Poplar
Ottawa
785-242-6655
OTTAWA PAINT
FRAMES & DECOR
Contact Heidi at
785-242-5007
109 S. Main
Ottawa, KS
202 S. Main, Ottawa 785-242-2112
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Notice to creditors
regarding Robie Estate
4×5 Iola/Allen Co Guide
The Petition will be heard in Anderson County
District Court, 100 E. 4th Avenue, Garnett,
Kansas, on the 13 day of November, 2019 at
10:00 a.m.
/s/ Mary Louise Ashton
Petitioner, Pro Se
Mary Louise Ashton
101 S. Catalpa, Unit 2
Garnett, KS 66032
816-745-1526
sp24t3*
Kirby Barnes, Chairman
Anderson County Fair Board
Conservation Service programs. Additionally, the
author mentions programs and
provisions that were added in
the 2018 farm bill to help beginning farmers and ranchers.
The impact of these programmatic changes is to be
determined, but we recognize
these changes reflect positive
progress toward the removal
of barriers for the next generation of producers, Johnson
said.
For more information and
to view Saluting Service: A
Guide to Lending and Farm
Program
Resources
for
Veterans, visit cfra.org/publications/SalutingService.
W E R E R E A DY T O S E RV E YO U I N
filed a Petition in the above court on the 12th
day of September, 2019, requesting a judgment
and order changing his/her name from Mary
Louise Ashton to Mari Louise Ashton.
If you have any objection to the requested
name change, you are required to file a responsive pleading on or before November 13, 2019
in this court or appear at the hearing and object
to the requested name change. If you fail to
act, judgment and order will be entered upon
the Petition as requested by Petitioner.
the Anderson County Annex building beginning
at 7:00 p.m., the members of the Anderson
County Fair Board shall meet for the purpose
of: electing from among their members a
Board of Directors consisting of a president,
vice-president, secretary, treasurer and 6 additional members.
Awareness
of
U.S.
Department of Agriculture
farm programs and key provisions, particularly with
regard to lending, is important for veterans transitioning
from the military to a second
career in agriculture, said
Anna Johnson, policy manager with the Center for Rural
Affairs. Veterans must know
what programs are available,
and how to utilize them to fit
the needs of their farming operations.
The white paper outlines
farm programs that specifically target beginning
and veteran farmers and
ranchers, including Farm
Service Agency loan programs and Natural Resources
Bruce & Joyce Beatty cornerstonebook@sbcglobal.net
Property managed by
Kay Management Company.
To advertise your
business in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
ANDERSON COUNTYS ONLY
LOCALLY-OWNED NEWSPAPERS
785-448-3121 / FAX 785-448-6253
email: review@garnett-ks.com
6×6
Shop @ Home
KANSAS STATEWIDE
ADVERTISING
Send your ad to more than
100 Kansas newspapers.
Ask us for details.
The Anderson County Review
785-448-3121
ANDERSON COUNTYS ONLY
LOCALLY-OWNED NEWSPAPERS
785-448-3121 / FAX 785-448-6253
email: review@garnett-ks.com
Anderson County
Hospital
SAINT LUKES HEALTH SYSTEM
saintlukeshealthsystem.org
421 S. Maple Garnett, KS 66032 (785) 448-3131
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
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shipping
service.
Insurance Agency
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
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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
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
LOCAL
Westphalia engineers of the future test their Egg Helmet design
by Mrs. Alford
Welcome to Junior
High science at Westphalia
School! In fifth through seventh grade we started the year
learning about engineering
and the engineering design
process. While eighth grade
started the year learning about
the various forms of energy.
During this learning process
each of the grades has completed a lab focused on reinforcing
the principals being learned.
Seventh grade students
shown in the pictures had to
design an Egg Helmet. The pictures show the students the day
we tested these helmets. Each
student had to drop their helmet with the egg in it from a
height of 1.5 meters. Each student thought at least one of the
helmets would fail, but everyones design succeeded. Even
though the experiment didnt
call for it, the students wanted
to retest from a greater height
to see how much impact their
helmet could take before the
egg inside was damaged. It was
at a height of 3 meters that one
of the designs did not keep the
egg intact. The students started
investigating the cause of the
broken egg and were successful
in noting that an unbalanced
weight in the materials caused
the helmet to land sideways
Brodmerkle
and Dennis
win duplicate
bridge
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-1-19 / SUBMITTED
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-1-19 / SUBMITTED
Hunter Harter-Morrissey dropping his
egg helmet from 1 meters with Mrs.
Alford.
Kristina Yoder, Brodi Gary, and Hunter
Harter-Morrissey checking their eggs
after dropping them.
and crack the egg.
I am so very proud of each
of the students for wanting to
complete each aspect of the
experiment, which includes a
good amount of paperwork; not
15 to be eligible for the Nov. 5
election.
The Kansas Secretary of
States website (www.sos.
ks.gov/elections) provides a
trove of information about how
and where to register; lists of
candidates and deadlines for
in-person advance voting, Oct.
16-Nov. 4; applying for and
returning advance ballots via
mail by Oct. 29; and when mail
ballots must be postmarked,
Nov. 5, and received by the
county election office, no later
than three days after the election.
As for getting to know the
candidates, Ive always thought
its much easier to do in local
elections than at the state and
federal level. Theres no party
politics to sort through since
all school boards and most
municipal elections are nonpartisan. The candidates also
tend to be less political and
more service minded, especially considering most positions
offer nothing or next to it in the
way of compensation.
Plus, especially in small
towns, you already know the
candidates. You go to church
together, sit next to each other
at Friday night ball games
and, possibly, went to school
together. For those election
seekers you may not be as
familiar with, there are plenty
of resources. Local newspapers
and radio stations will provide
standard coverage of candidates, civic groups will hold
forums and the candidates
often have websites or social
media pages detailing their
backgrounds and the issues
important for them.
While all of those methods
will certainly help inform your
vote, the very best practice is
to question candidates directly. Whether you are worried
about taxes, spending, public safety or have some other
concern, candidates answers
are often illuminating of how
theyll govern. Be wary of anyone who refuses or deflects
from direct, relevant inquiries.
If they dont provide straightforward answers when seeking
your vote, how can you trust
theyll be responsive to your
inquiries if theyre elected?
I know why local elections
are less popular than state and
federal contests. Theres less
partisanship and rancor. It
often seems like theres less
on the line, even though that
couldnt be further from the
truth. No matter your politics,
the system works best with an
engaged and educated electorate.
Ill be at the ballot box this
November. I hope to see you
there, too.
"Insight" is a weekly column
published by Kansas Farm
Bureau, the state's largest farm
organization whose mission is
to strengthen agriculture and
the lives of Kansans through
advocacy, education and service.
History Matters – Important
moments in Octobers history
Model T
On October 1, 1908 Henry
Fords Model T automobile
went on sale. Nicknamed the
Tin Lizzy, it was considered
to be one of the most influential
inventions of the 20th Century.
And, Fords use of assembly-lines to mass produce them
made the Model Ts price accessible to the average customer.
The American industrial revolution had begun.
Thurgood Marshall
Thurgood Marshall was
sworn in as the first African
American associate justice
of the U.S. Supreme Court on
October 2, 1967. His career-encompassing crusade to abolish
prejudicial laws that restricted
rights based on race earned
him the moniker, Mr. Civil
Rights. In the years prior to
his appointment, Marshall
argued 32 cases before the
Court; three are considered
landmark victories.
In 1944 he argued, successfully, on behalf of the plaintiffs
in Smith v. Allwright to overturn a Texas law which allowed
the Democratic Party to limit
primary voters based on race;
four years later, he took the
lead in Shelley v. Kramer, and
the Court voted to strike down
racially circumscribed housing covenants. And, in 1954,
he stood before the justices,
FROM PAGE 1
structure struggles to provide
as well as running water to
clean equipment, restrooms
and an office area.
County fire chief Mick
Brinkmeyer said he hoped to
finalize the project plans Sept.
30. No construction timetable
had been set as of last week.
See you at the ballot box
Greg Doering, Kansas Farm
Bureau
As the calendar turns to
October and a political circus
fully envelops D.C., its important to remember theres an
election on the horizon thats
not the 2020 presidential referendum.
In November Kansans will
head to the polls and cast ballots for school board members
and city councilors. Voters
also will have a say on borrowing money for new schools,
increasing sales tax and other
measures.
In short, Novembers election is more consequential for
the day-to-day lives of most
Kansans than anything that
happens in 2020. Not only are
the stakes higher for your
everyday living, your vote will
likely have an outsized impact
on the election.
For example, in my home
county 65 percent of eligible
voters cast 22,198 ballots in the
2016 general election. Fewer
than 6,000 voters turned out
for 2015s local races. That
increased slightly in 2017 to
just over 8,000, which is still
less than a quarter of registered voters. The smaller the
turnout, the more heft your
individual vote will carry.
Nows the time to get registered and get educated. U.S.
citizens living in Kansas who
will turn 18 before Election
Day must submit their registration applications to their
county election officer by Oct.
BUILDING…
bucked Brown v. Board of
Education, and achieved a ruling that declared segregation
in public facilities and schools
to be unconstitutional.
Great Fire of Chicago
Legend has it was Mrs.
OLearys cow started the
Great Fire of Chicago on
October 8, 1871. But the fact is
that while it likely began in
the OLeary barn downtown,
the Smithsonian reports that
a board of inquiry could not
confirm it. When the smoke
cleared, 300 residents had died,
approximately 90,000 were left
homeless, and nearly 17,500
edifices were burned to the
ground. A great great rebuilding followed, using innovative
construction methods to hedge
against the possibility of a similar, future conflagration.
The reconstruction created
a new kind of city center.
U.S. Navy birthday
The U.S Navy celebrates its
244th birthday on October 13,
2019. The American Revolution
began in April of 1775, and the
Continental Congress established the seafaring branch
of Americas armed forces six
months later. The purpose was
to disrupt British supply lines
by purchasing a fleet of small
merchant vessels and arming
them to intercept British vessels carrying munitions and
stores. Just as the Continental
Army produced its own heroes,
so did the newborn Continental
Navy. Notable among them
was John Paul Jones, who did
not hesitate to enlist soon after
the Revolution began with the
rank of Senior Lieutenant.
By 1779, having already distinguished himself in battle,
he was given command of the
Bon Homme Richard, a converted French merchant ship.
In a famous sea battle with
the more powerful British battleship, HMS Serapis, Jones
rammed it, effectively attaching the Bon Homme Richard
to the Serapis. During the skirmish, the British commander
is said to have asked Jones if
he was ready to surrender, to
which he supposedly responded: I have not yet begun to
fight. The close quarters in
which the battle was fought
gave Joness crew the opportunity to use grenades to overpower the British ship.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-1-19 / SUBMITTED
Brodi Gary dropping her egg helmet from
3 meters as Kristina Yoder and Mrs. Alford
watch.
just the fun part of creating and
dropping a helmet with an egg
in it.
Steve Brodmerkle of Neosho
Falls and Anita Dennis of
Garnett edged the Ottawa
team of Marilyn Grace and the
Savonburg team of Charles and
Peggy Carlson by a point to win
the duplicate match September
25th in Garnett.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all
bridge players Wednesdays at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
Kansas fiction writers have
opportunity to win award
Topeka, KS Kansas Fiction
Writers with book length
works published in the past
three years (2017/18/19) are
eligible to win the $1,000 2020
Hefner Heitz Kansas Book
Award in Fiction. The annual award, rotating between
poetry, fiction, and nonfiction
is sponsored by the Thomas
Fox Averill Kansas Studies
Collection
at
Washburn
University in Topeka and
there is no fee to enter. This
year's judge will be 2017 Fiction
winner Andrew Milward, who
grew up in Lawrence, Kansas.
A graduate of the Iowa Writers
Workshop, Milward teaches
at the University of Kentucky.
His prize-winning book was I
Was A Revolutionary: Stories
Deadline for submission is
December 15, 2019. For complete guidelines, please visit:
http://www.washburn.edu/
mabee/ksbookaward
The 2010 Hefner Heitz
Kansas Book Award in Poetry
went to Patricia Traxler for her
collection, Naming the Fires,
from Hanging Loose Press.
The Thomas Fox Averill
Kansas Studies Collection
3×10.5
Renaissance Festival
sponsor of the competition
is an eclectic, inclusive set
of materials dedicated to the
study of Kansas literature
through the states folklore,
history, geography, flora,
fauna, social fabric and culture. The holdings include novels, plays, collections of poetry
and fiction, histories, biographies, memoirs, letters, scholarly articles, collected folklore,
manuscripts and ephemera
gathered over more than forty
years.
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Tuesday, October 1
5:30 a.m. – Spin Class
10 a.m. – Storytime for Preschoolers
@ Garnett Public Library
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
– Dominoes, cards and pool table
5 p.m. – Spin Class
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Community
Foundation Board Meeting
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 2
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate Bridge at
the Garnett Inn
4:30 p.m. – Tourism Advisory Board
5:30 p.m. – ACHS Booster Club Mtg.
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Elementary Site
Council Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
6 p.m. – GES PTO Meeting
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club Meeting
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club Meeting
Thursday, October 3
5:30 a.m. – Spin Class
9 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
– Dominoes, cards and pool table
5 p.m. – Spin Class
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
6 p.m. – 13 pt. pitch and snacks @
Garnett Senior Center
6:30 p.m. – Anderson County Historical
Society Meeting
6:30 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment Assn
7 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7 p.m. – USD BOE Meeting
Friday, October 4
Garnett Airport Advistory Board Chairman Pat Schettler gives
a walking tour of various aircraft on display during Thursdays
Kansas Air Tour stop in Garnett. More than 50 planes participated in the tour.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-1-2019 / DANE HICKS
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
Monday, October 7
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
9 a.m. – Anderson County Commission
Meeting @ Annex
9 a.m. – Friendship Quilters Meeting
4 p.m. – Greeley PTO
6 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery @
Church of the Nazarene
6 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club Meeting
6 p.m. – Library Board Meeting
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lodge
No. 338 Meeting
Tuesday, October 8
5:30 a.m. – Spin Class
10 a.m. – Storytime for Preschoolers
@ Garnett Public Library
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
– Dominoes, cards and pool table
5 p.m. – Spin Class
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
6 p.m. – City Commission Meeting
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support Group
6 p.m. – Golden Prairie Beekeepers Mtg.
7 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 9
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
10 a.m. – Remember When Wednesdays
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate Bridge at
the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – Parks & Recreation Advisory
Board Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
6 p.m. – VFW Post 6397 Meeting
7 p.m. – Friends of the PSRT Meeting
7 p.m. – Garnett Optimist Club Meeting
Thursday, October 10
5:30 a.m. – Spin Class
9 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
– Dominoes, cards and pool table
4:30 p.m. Garnett Fire Department
Open House
5 p.m. – Spin Class
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
6 p.m. – 13 pt. pitch and snacks @
Garnett Senior Center
7 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-1-2019 / SUBMITTED
The Garnett BPW 2019-20 Officers were recently announced. Front
row, from left: Jenny Myers-Treasurer, Shirley Benjamin-Local
Organization Rep; Back row, from left: Sherry Benjamin-Secretary,
Helen Norman-President-Elect, Bonnie Deiter-President; Not pictured – Jenelle Klehammer-Vice President
Grab passersby with window displays
If youre in retail you already
know the benefits of traffic the
idea of walking eyeballs past
your store. If youre not creating cool window displays to
draw in those eyeballs youre
selling yourself, your business
and your revenues short.
For the 3-4 steps it takes someone to pass by your store on the
sidewalk, you have a captive
audience. Nearly half will look
at your window anyway, older
shoppers (with more money) are
less likely to have their noses
stuck in their smartphones, and
half again more will look if they
see someone else looking. Use
these tips to get them off the
sidewalk and into the store:
1) Think distance. Is the traffic
by your store walkers or drivers? If most is drive-by, your
displays have to be bigger and
simpler for the shorter time
frame. Walk-by traffic has more
time to see smaller items with
more information.
2) Make a plan and change your
window displays at least every
month or two. Look at your
sales, the seasons, holidays, etc.,
and map out on a calendar when
youll change your windows and
jot some ideas you might use.
That way you have notes to go
back to if you get an ah ha
later and want to revise.
3) Think eye-level. Go outside to
your window and stick a piece
of tape to it at the eye-level of
the average customer, then go
inside and make the visual focus
of your display at that plane.
4) Bright, bold colors for display
stands holding products, more
subtle colors for backgrounds
but most importantly constrast the displays and products
Friday, October 11
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
4 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board Meeting
4:30 p.m. – Garnett Grand Prix Revival
Saturday, October 12
Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival
Sunday, October 13
Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival
Monday, October 14
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
9 a.m. – Anderson County Commission
Meeting @ Annex
6 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery @
Church of the Nazarene
7 p.m. – American Legion Meeting
7 p.m. – Garnett Housing Authority
Advisory Board Meeting
Tuesday, October 15
5:30 a.m. – Spin Class
10 a.m. – Storytime for Preschoolers
@ Garnett Public Library
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
– Dominoes, cards and pool table
5 p.m. – Spin Class
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
5:30 p.m. – BPW Meeting
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
6 p.m. – Garnett Planning Commission
7 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 16
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate Bridge at
the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
1×2
Ster
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
5×7 Anderson County Hospital
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Publisher
THEPublisher
TRADING POST
Review
against the background.
5) The display should tell a story
start out with a theme based
on something timely or witty,
then add pieces (products, info
displays) from your store to finish out the story. Maybe a fake
cats tail sticking out of the nozzle of the vacuum cleaner youre
displaying?
6) Big visuals are key. You can
shoot photos of your products,
your staff, customers enjoying
your products, etc., with a digital camera or even your smart
phone, then have them blown
up to poster sizes at a digital
photo center. Mount them on
foam core, and you have a cool
giant product display to focus
smaller photos or items around.
Dont forget lighting to highlight
focus areas.
7) Where possible use motion.
The easiest way is to set up a
fan blowing streamers, a pinwheel or a mannequins hair,
etc. You can find electric motors
that can be rigged to lighter
signage or other parts of the
display. With just a little bit
of techy know-how you can set
up a digital video projector to
run your slides or video from
a laptop and project onto part
of your display. Vikuiti makes
a rear projection film you can
stick on your windows and project your commercials, product
info, slides, etc., directly onto
your window, so the whole window becomes a lit-from-behind
movie screen to the outside.
8) Keep it clean. Nothing kills a
great window display like dust
bunnies or dead flies.
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displays and dont let sales walk
right past you.
Dane Hicks, President
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
The Anderson County Review
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
SPORTS
Bulldogs rout Iola behind strong defense Vikings lose 5 OT
thriller to Oskalooska
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
IOLA – After a disappointing
loss to Santa Fe Trail a week
earlier in their home opener,
the Anderson County Bulldogs
responded with an impressive
35-6 victory on the road against
Iola.
The game was dominated by
the AC defense after being ran
over by SFT.
The Bulldogs took the opening kickoff and had their most
impressive drive of the night
melting 6 minutes off of the
clock and punctuated the drive
with a 4 yard touchdown run
by Bo Dilliner.
On the ensuing possession after being stalled by the
Bulldog defense, the Iola special teams coughed up the ball
allowing Justin Stifter to scoop
it up and score a touchdown
from 15 yards out with just 1:01
remining in the first quarter to
give AC a 14-0 lead.
Dilliner scored his second touchdown on the night
with 1:33 remaining in the
half to give the Bulldogs what
appeared to be a 21-0 lead heading into halftime.
Iola though would promptly fumble on their next possession with just 1:03 left in
the half as Dalton Kellerman
forced the fumble which was
recovered by Bronson Sparks.
Anderson County would
make Iola pay for their mistake
scoring on another short touchdown by Dilliner with just 1.8
seconds left for a commanding
28-0 lead at intermission.
The Iola miscues continued
in the third quarter as Dilliner
intercepted a pass and Jayden
Jarrett recovered a fumble for
two more turnovers in the period.
Neither team scored in the
third quarter but the Bulldogs
scored on the opening play of
the fourth on another Dilliner
run to take a 35-0 lead.
Iola would tack on a late
touchdown to account for the
final of 35-6.
Coach Pegram said his kids
were eager to learn and move
on from the loss the previous
week and they did exactly that.
All week we committed
practice to stopping the run
after our performance against
SantFe Trail. Our kids had the
best week of practice Ive seen
while Ive been here and really
bought into one another. We
talked about putting a solid
week together then showcasing
their ability when it was game
time, Pegram said.
Overall I think Pegram
knows his offense can score
some points but knows it will
take an improved defense to
win games down the stretch.
Our kids on defense played
one of the most complete games
they have played in awhile and
it had everything to do with
how they prepared. Defense is
going to be our focus for the
rest of the year. Our ability to
stop the run will lead to our
team success, Pegram added.
On offense quarterback
Dilliner once again led the way.
Dilliner completed 6 of 9 passes
for 65 yards and was limited to
61 yards on 15 carries but still
managed to score 4 rushing
touchdows in the game.
Austine Edens toted the ball
12 times for 64 yards and Fisher
Galey chipped in with 2 carries
for 28 yards.
We played a great game
Friday, Pegram said in
regards to the matchup with
Iola. Our ability to stop the
run and run the ball allowed
for a very good game on both
sides of the ball. Even with an
early start Friday they showed
up and won in all three phases
of the game.
Pegram had hoped to get the
young guys in the game to give
them experience and reward
them for their hard work in
practice but the clock didnt
cooperate.
(Clip and mail with your out-of-area correspondence)
We had a running clock in
the fourth quarter which prevented us from getting some
of our young kids in who prepared well all week, but our
ability to take the ball away
4 times and score on special
teams from one of those takeaways was fun. Anytime you
see a kid like Josh Stifter score
a touchdown it makes you
smile. Our kids are starting to
buy into the program and into
one another, Pegram said.
Next week we host a very
good Girard team that runs
the ball and can spread it out
if they need too. We need to
have another good week to
keep the momentum from this
week going. Our kids ability
to put this week behind them
and turn the page to Girard
will show where we are at this
year. This game will go along
way into getting a leg up on the
district.
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND – The Oskalooska
Bears and the Central Heights
Vikings both entered the game
at 0-3 and each team has struggled offensively and following
intermission the teams seemed
to be following that pattern but
after 5 overtimes Osklooska
found themselves winning
a 48-42 thriller over Central
Heights.
The Vikings and Bears
had scored just 12 points each
through their first 3 games.
Central Heights promptly
scored 16 points in the first
quarter and kept that advantage heading into halftime leading the game 16-0.
The Bears though would
score once in the third and then
again in the fourth quarter
with just 11 seconds remaining
to knot the game up at 16 after
converting the two-point con-
Relax.
Theres a small town out beyond the traffic and crime
where the hustle ends;
version and forcing overtime.
The offenses came alive in
the extra sessions though.
In each of the first four overtimes both teams scored touchdowns. It was not until the
fifth overtime when the Bears
finally converted and held the
Vikings out of the endzone to
end this marathon of a game.
Cass Burroughs completed
8 of 13 passes for 69 yards and
a touchdown. Burroughs also
added a score on the ground.
Tony Kirkland was the
workhorse toting the ball 30
times for 109 yards and 3 touchdowns.
Tony Detwiler added 52
yards on the ground on 12 carries and caught 3 passes for
another 29 yards.
Brady Burson had a solid all
around game with 11 carries
for 35 yards and a touchdown
while also adding 8 tackles and
2 tackles for a loss on defense.
Colin Haynes hauled in 2
passes for 23 yards a score and
on defense tallied 11 tackles.
Dominic Lopez was a force
on defense with 9 tackles, 2.5
tackles for a loss and recovered
a fumble.
Timmy Smith led the team
with 2 sacks and tallied 8 tackles on the night.
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Anderson County Abstract
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Princeton
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Farmers State Bank
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State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
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Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
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Tom Adams Construction
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
3B
SPORTS
Viking cross country boys & girls sweep again
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
LACYGNE – Another week,
more domination from the
Central Heights Viking cross
country squads as the boys
and girls both won team golds
despite some stiff competition
at the Prairie View Invitational
last Thursday.
The girls have now won backto-back titles after not having
enough athletes to compete on
a regular basis as a team for
years. The Lady Vikings ended
the day with 46 points, followed
by Louisburg in second with 57
points and Anderson County
finished third with 65 points.
The boys team finished
first with 43 points. Louisburg
wasnt far behind with 49
points and Anderson County
was well within striking distance with 52 points to finish in
third place.
After last week, we had
a chance to either prove we
are ready to keep growing as a
team or to take a very common
mid-season step backwards,
head coach Troy Prosser stated.
Obviously his athletes
remain motivated and have so
far avoided any step backwards
really over the past couple of
seasons now.
The 7th grade boys, led by
Connor Burkdolls individual championship and three
other teammates in the top 10
(Jotham, Cody, and Brylan),
started the day off strong for
us, Prosser said.
Prosser
added,
Kaylee
Holstine also had another
strong performance, just missing her 2nd victory of the season by only two seconds. Not to
mention the 12 personal bests
that were set by the runners.
Regardless of the outcome,
Prosser needs to find areas to
improve on even if they arent
glaring from the average person. It is sometimes important
to keep their motivation and
not get complacent.
On the high school side
of things, both varsity squads
kept rolling and seemed to get
a little stronger in some ways,
while a few needed improvements became apparent,
Prosser stated.
Finally Prosser added, The
most important part of the day
for us was just getting out of the
meet healthy. Each and every
week we know that we have
opportunities to keep building
on the past, and today I think
the kids did a great job of supporting each other.
Madison Bridges (21:03), Lily
Meyer (21:25) and Abby Brown
(21:33) finished 3rd, 4th and 5th
respectively to pace the first
place Lady Vikings.
Tyler Stevenson and Alex
Cannady were separated by 2
hundredths of a second as they
finished first and second.
Stevenson finished in
18:06.38 and Alex Cannadys
time was 18:06.38.
Luke Cotter (18:44, 5th place)
and David Craft (18:53, 7th
place) joined them in the top 10.
Varsity Boys 5K (49 runners)
TEAM – 1st place **
1st – Tyler Stevenson (18:06)
2nd – Alex Cannady (18:06)
5th – Luke Cotter (18:44)
7th – David Craft (18:53)
Luke Burkdoll (20:59)
Varsity Girls 5K (38 runners)
TEAM – 1st place
3rd – Madison Bridges (21:03)
4th – Lily Meyer (21:25)
5th – Abby Brown (21:33)
16th – Taryn Compton (23:26)
22nd – Samantha Ferris (24:44)
JV Boys 5K (35 runners)
6th – Nicholas Schultze (21:18)
27th – Max Cannady (25:42)
8th Grade Girls 2 Mile
13th – Taylor Mitchell (16:10)
8th Grade Boys 2 Mile
5th – Dakota Kuczmarski (12:10)
21st – Alex Skeet (16:43)
7th Grade Girls 2 Mile
2nd – Kaylee Holstine (12:52)
10th – Ashley Harkins (16:04)
25th – Arabella Dunbar (18:12)
7th Grade Boys 2 Mile
1st – Connor Burkdoll (12:02)
4th – Jotham Meyer (12:57)
9th – Cody Hammond (13:53)
10th – Brylan Sommer (13:56)
11th – Owen Mille (14:10)
20th – Kreig Garrett (15:53)
24th – Aydan Dunbar (16:16)
33rd – Aidan Howland (17:05)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELLSVILLE – Anderson
County knocked off Prairie
View to open up play on
Wellsville last Tuesday before
losing the second game to
Wellsville.
The win over Prairie View
was in two games, 25-14 and
25-10.
Wellsville downed the Lady
Bulldogs in two hard fought
battles. Anderson Country
dropped the first set 25-20
before dropping the second set
27-25.
Cali Foltz played extremely
well and was our biggest asset
for both games, head coach
Alaina Fairbanks stated.
Foltz had 5 kills, 3 aces and
3 digs in the opening game
against Prairie View. In the
second game against Wellsville
Cali had 9 kills, 7 digs, 3 stuff
blocks and an ace.
Abby Reid led the way with
9 assists and 4 aces against
Prairie View and had 7 stuff
blocks, 5 kills and 7 assists ver-
sus Wellsville.
Kaylyn Disbrow had 6 kills
and an ace to open the night
against PV and added 5 more
kills against Wellsville.
Remi McAdam led the
Bulldogs with 12 assists against
Wellsville despite the loss, finished with 18 in the two games.
Bulldog men and women both finish 3rd
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
LACYGNE – In a day when
nearly every Anderson County
Bulldog cross country team set
personal best times, both the
boys and girls team finished
3rd behind Central Heights
and Louisburg.
Leading the charge for the
girls team was Rayna Jasper
(22:04) finishing 8th place.
Freshman Maryah Ackerman
just missed the top 10 finishing
11th with a time of 22:36.37.
Lilly Spring (23:12.04) finished in 15th, Daelynn Peine
(23:53.74) finished 18th, Lanie
Walter (24:22.62) finished 20th.
Makenzie Kueser (25:18.87) and
Katie Schmit (25:50.73) finished
26th and 29th respectively.
In boys action, Morgan Hall-
Kropf once again leads the
way. Hall-Kropf finished 3rd
with a time of 18:23.11.
Also finishing in the top 12
were Dallas Kueser (18:58.64,
9th place), Riley Hedges
(19:05.80, 11th place) and Kasen
Fudge (19:07.93, 12th place).
The trio of Orvel Broce
(19:45, 17th place), Jere Riehl
(19:46.43, 18th place) and
Nathan Schmit (20:32.02, 27th
place) werent far behind.
To illustrate the depth of the
Bulldog cross country team,
they also finished with the top
6 runners in the Junior Varsity
race.
Seneca Wettstein (19:35, 1st),
Anthony Childers (20:12.01,
2nd), Carther Edgecomb
(20:27.21, 3rd), Leo Sheahan
(20:49.90, 4th), Tucker Nelson
(20:51.45, 5th) and Dylan Cole
(21:02, 6th) dominated the top
spots.
Also earning a JV medal
was 10th place finisher Cody
Bahnsen.
Head Coach Mike Sibley
was happy with the effort of
his entire squad.
The team had a great effort
this afternoon with nearly
every athlete running their
best time for the season,
Sibley stated.
Medal Winners
8th Grade
4th Addie Fudge
JV Girls
Team-1st Place
6th Bailey Gruver
5th Orra Lutz
Lancer cross country competed at Iola
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
The top two runners from
Crest didnt run at last weeks
Doc Stiles Invitational in Iola
as they competed on Saturday
at the Rim Rock Classic in
Lawrence but it was a good
chance for the rest of the team
to continue to develop and
improve.
For the JV boys Victor
Susko finished 51st with a time
of 26:38 running the 4K.
This is only Victor's second meet, he is a foreign
exchange student from Brazil,
head coach Kaitlyn Dispensa
explained.
Middle school runners
have been working hard on
running within practice and at
meets. Everyones times have
been improving. Their hard
work in practice is showing
within the meets, Dispensa
added.
Middle school athletes ran
the mile.
Girls Peyton Schmidt finished 6th with a time of 6:57.74
and Halle Klotz finished with a
time of 7:59.03.
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The 7th grade boys Gentry
McGhee finished 10th with a
time of 6:32.28, Breakin Jones
(7:31.29) crossed in 20th and
Matt Beckmon completed the
course in 7:35.58.
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BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
SPRING HILL – On Wednesday,
the Lady Bulldog golfers traveled to Spring Hill and had a
pair of golfers finish in the top
20 en route to a fourth place
finish as a team.
The top finisher for
Anderson
County
was
Maclaine Sears, who shot a 45
and finished 4th.
The top two finishers were
Lauren Madison (41) and
Karlie Chipman (42), both of
Fort Scott High School.
Madolyn Honn (55) finished
17th overall, Jaxcen Farren (58)
finished 21st, Ally Duke (62) finished 31st, Reese Witherspoon
and Hailey Blanton both shot
a 66 and finished 37th and 38th
respectively.
Lady Bulldog golf finishes
2nd at Council Grove
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COUNCIL GROVE – Madison
Stevens paced the Lady
Bulldogs at the Council Grove
Invitational shooting a 39 overall finishing in 2nd place.
Stevens actually tied Laci
Davenport of Osage City with a
39 but lost the tiebreaker.
Jaxcen Farren (49) finished
8th, Madolyn Honn (55) was
16th, Ally Duke (58) finished
22nd and Reese Witherspoon
(72) rounded out Bulldog golfers in 41st place.
Bulldogs down Lyndon,
lose a pair at West Franklin
Bulldog volleyball earns split at Wellsville
BY KEVIN GAINES
AC girls golf finishes
4th at Spring Hill
2nd Emily Moyer
1st Maya Corley
JV Boys
Team-1st Place
10th Cody Bahnsen
6th Dylan Cole,
5th Tucker Nelson
4th Leo Sheahan
3rd Carter Edgecomb
2nd Anthony Childers
1st Seneca Wettstein
Varsity Girls
15th Lilly Spring
11th Maryah Ackerman (9th
best time all time)
8th Rayna Jasper
Varsity Boys
12th Kasen Fudge
11th Riley Hedges
9th Dallas Kueser
3rd Morgan Hall-Kropf
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
POMONA – On Saturday
the Anderson County Lady
Bulldogs lost 2 of their 3 matches, their only win coming
against Lyndon.
Anderson County downed
Lyndon in 2 games, 25-18 and
25-9.
Their losses were to Osage
City in 3 hard fought matches
(20-25, 25-22 and 26-24) and to
Perry-Lecompton in 2 games
25-22 and 25-18.
Next up for Anderson
County is Tuesday at 4:30 p.m.
at Osawatomie.
Crest runners compete
at Rim Rock Classic
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
On Saturday Elka and
Ursula Billings competed at
Rim Rock Classic in Lawrence.
Ursula and Elka were excited to compete at Rim Rock, the
weather was perfect for running. I felt like the conditions
couldnt be any better for the
girls to compete, head coach
Kaitlyn Dispensa stated.
Ursula went out with
determination on wanting to
strive for a place within the
top 25. Even though she did not
receive a metal she received a
PR at one of the toughest courses, Dispensa added.
Ursula finished 30th with
a time of 21:42.9. Elka wanted
to start out further back then
push in the middle of the race.
The course and competition
was tough and Elka finished
57th with a time of 22:44.5.
Overall, I was impressed with
how the girls competed.
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4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
5B
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Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
Oxygen – Anytime. Anywhere.
No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One
G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA
approved! Free info kit: 866649-0661
Were you an industrial or
construction tradesman and
recently diagnosed with lung
cancer? You and your family
may be entitled to a significant
cash award. Call 866-409-2142
for your risk free consultation.
Save on your Medicare
Supplement!
Free quotes
from top providers. Excellent
coverage. Call for a no obligation quote to see how much you
can save! 855-587-1299
Viagra and Cialis Users!
Theres a cheaper alternative
than high drugstore prices!
50 Pills Special $99.00 Free
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call Now! 855-850-3904
Best Satellite TV with 2 Year
Price Guarantee! $59.99/mo
with 190 channels and 3 months
free premium movie channels!
Free next day installation! Call
316-223-4415
Get
A-Rated
Dental
Insurance
starting
at
around $1 per day! Save 25% on
Enrollment Now! No Waiting
Periods. 200k+ Providers
Nationwide. Everyone is
Accepted! Call 785-329-9747
(M-F 9-5 ET)
Denied Social Security
Disability? Appeal! If youre
50+, filed for SSD and denied,
our attorneys can help get you
approved! No money out of
pocket! Call 785-329-4931.
Cash paid for your unwanted Inogen or Respironics portable oxygen concentrators!
Call Now for top-dollar offer.
Agents available 24/7. No
CPAP/Tanks. 844-909-0094
Attention Small Business
Owners! Are you protected
in case of property damage
or if you have an interruption in service due to a property event? Business Owner
Property insurance is affordable and will protect you when
the unexpected happens! For
free quote, call 913-914-7784
(M-F 7:30am-9:30pm ET)
St Johns Hall – Greeley City
Wide, Saturday, October 5,
7am-2pm. Bake sale. $1 bag
sales at noon (St. Johns). oc1t1
Little John Sherwood
MAKE MONEY.
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
fb5tf
SERVICES
SERVICES
ryter
Farm
1×2& Greenhouse
lil jon
Large Hardy
785-835-7057
1×2
edg
(913) 594-2495
Garden Mums
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Check out our
Monthly Specials
1×3
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
SERVICES
1×2
AD
2×2
kpa
1×2
roberts
Spray Foam Insulation and more
Closed and Open Cell Insulation
2×2
Attic Blown Fiberglass Insulation
Batt Insulation
precision foam
Licensed and Insured
LEGAL SECRETARY
2×21.5
craig
Now accepting resumes
for part-time secretary
(4 to 5 hours per day). Must have good typing, organizational,
cole
communication, filing and computer skills, and be able
Foam Insulation
to manage multiple tasks at once.
Please hand deliver or mail resume with references to:
Attorney Craig E. Cole, 114 E. 5th Avenue,
P.O. Box 371, Garnett, Kansas 66032
Water Plant Operator
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for
2×4.5
to day operations of the water plant and may also include
cityin theofoperations
garnett
assisting
of the wastewater treatment facilty
the position of Water Plant Operator. Duties include the day
biblesta
JD Yutzy
785-448-8727
Call today for all your insulation needs
Quality and customer satisfaction is #1
Gerald & Billie Cox Farm Auction
3900 KS Hwy 7, Mound City, Ks. Saturday, Oct. 5, 2019 Sale Time 9:30 a.m.
and power plant. Flexible scheduling is a possibility. The
ideal candidate will have a high school diploma or GED and
a Class III Kansas Water License. Candidate must have
the ability to obtain a Class III Water Operator Certification
through the State of Kansas within three (3) years if they dont
already have a certification.
For a complete job description and application, stop by City
Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or visit www.HRePartners.com.
Competitive salary based upon qualifications and excellent
benefits package. The po-
sition will remain open until
filled, with the first review
of applications occurring
on October 18. EOE
www.simplygarnett.com
Quality Hometown Sales & Service!
$12,900
3×3 beckman motors
TIRE PRICE MATCH GUARANTEE
Provide us with a better
price at the time of puchase
and well match it.
Coupon Code: 201
Expires: 12-31-2019
Find a better price within 30 days of the purchase and well
refund the difference. *Eligible Tire Brands: BFGoodrich,
Bridgestone, Continental, Dunlop, Firestone, General,
Goodyear, Hankook, Kelly, Michelin, Pirelli and Uniroyal.
$16,900
2014 Chevrolet
Traverse FWD LS
82,000 Miles,
Power Driver Seat,
Bluetooth for Phone,
Backup Camera
2010 Ford F-150
Lariat 4WD
113,000 Miles,
Heated/Cooled Front Bucket
Seats, Moonroof, Bluetooth,
Backup Camera
JOB OPENING
Full-time
IT Support Tech, Linn County
3×6
linn county
Linn County is accepting applications for a Full-Time IT Support Technician.
We are looking for a self-motivated person with good technical computer
and networking skills. The job involves day-to-day computer support by
phone/in person, computer and hardware installation/service/repair, network troubleshooting, and occasional project management. Will need good
social media skills, as this position is responsible for updating county websites and social media sites. Programming skills are a plus, such as PHP and
Java. Must be able to pass a criminal history background check, since the
job may allow access to sensitive government data. The position is primarily
based in Mound City, Kansas, but the department supports systems all over
Linn County, so some travel may be necessary. Depending on qualifications
and work history, the positions starting pay is between $19-$22/hr and full
benefits offered by Linn County.
Benefits Include: Individual/Family Health Insurance, County Funded HSA,
Supplemental Health Insurance, Deferred Compensation Plan with 2%
Matching Contribution, Health and Wellness Benefits, Paid Vacation and Sick
Leave, 11 Paid Holidays, and more.
Applications are available online at www.linncountyks.com
or at the Linn County Clerks office.
Applications will be accepted until 4:30 PM, October 11, 2019.
Please submit your application to the Clerks office.
Linn County is an Equal Opportunity Employer
See full sale bill & photos at www.martyreadauction.com
TRACTOR PICKUP FARM TRUCK 4-WHEELER VINTAGE
CAR EQUIPMENT ATV FEEDER UTILITY TRAILER FENCING VINTAGE FISHING TACKLE GUN CABINET & AMMO
DEER MOUNTS & ANTLERS KNIVES SHOP TOOLS
CATTLE PANELS SQUEEZE CHUTE CATTLE SUPPLIES &
EQUIPMENT TACK VINTAGE & MARTY READ AUCTION SERVICE
620-224-6495
WORKHORSE LAWN & GARDEN
Charley Johnson & Marvin Swickhammer,
assistant auctioneers
APPLIANCES FURNITURE
Real Estate, Farm, Livestock & Commercial
www.martyreadauction.com
PIANO SEWING
TERMS AND CONDITIONS: Not responsible for accidents. Verbal
statements made day of sale take precedence over written material.
much more…see the website!
TRUCKS, TRACTORS, ATV, EQUIP. & TOOLS AUCTION
Saturday, Oct. 5, 2019 10 a.m. 37700 W. 287th, Paola, Ks
Directions: 68 Highway to Pressonville Road, south on Pressonville Road 1 mile to
287th, go east on 287th apprx. 1/2 mile to auction site on north side of road. From
Paola, take Old KC Road to 287th then west on 287th apprx. 14 1/2 miles to auction
SHARRON SPENCE, OWNER
3×8 wendt
Troy Bilt 5hp. Trimmer Mower 36 Aluminum Pipe Wrench & Truck (new)
TRUCKS
70 International 1100, 4
Speed
86 Ford F150 4×4, 4 Speed,
V-8, 5.0, Electronic Fuel
Injection, New Brakes,
Pads, Lines, Tires & Heater
Core, Lockout Hubs,
78,262mi.
01 Dodge Ram 1500 4×4,
Extended Cab, 360 (5.9), V-8
Magnum, Auto Transmission, Cloth Interior
TRACTORS
Ford 4000, WFE, Gas, 3pt.,
Draw Bar, PTO (Good Rubber)
Belarus 305 w/Cab & Westendorf Loader w/5 Bucket,
WFE, 3pt., Draw Bar, Single
Hyd., PTO, Diesel, 786 hrs.
Allis WD, WFE, Snap Coupler
& Draw Bar
ATV
Polaris Magnum 325 4×4 ATV
GOLF CART
EZGO Gas Golf Cart
EQUIPMENT
Littleston 8 Finish Mower
Farm Star 3pt. Bale Stinger
Priefert 3pt. Boom
9 3pt. Post Hole Auger
Bush Hog SQ600 6 Rotary
Mower
6 3pt. Finish Mower
4 3pt. Tiller
60 gal. Boom Sprayer w/8
Boom, gas
6 3pt. Blade
LAWN & GARDEN
Stanley 52 Cut Lawn Tractor,
Hydro Automatic, 22hp.,
Twin Cylinder Engine
Forest King 22 Ton Log Splitter, 26 Split & Maxx 6.5hp.
Stihl Wood Boss 028AV Chain
Saw
Stihl 021 Chain Saw
Stock Tanks
Misc. Garden Tools
Plastic Pallets
Push Mower
1 Water Pump
Lawn Seeders
ABI 3 Electric Gravel Grader
JD Tilt Bed Lawn Cart
Lawn Cart
10-275 gal. Water Tank in
Metal Tote
500 & 300 gal. Fuel Tanks &
Stand
Craftsman 20hp./10 Cultivator, gas
Coleman Lanterns
SHOP EQUIPMENT
Maxx Air 32 Shop Fan
Heat Buster 44 Shop Fan
Iron Horse Portable Air Compressor, 1.5hp, 125PSI
Campbell Iron Force Air
Compressor, 5/5hp, 26 gal.
Craftsman 100AC Infinite
Amp Arc Welder
Craftsman 5 Drawer Tool Box
Ryobi 10 Surface Planer
Shop Lights
Clark Turbo Weld 100 EW Wire
Welder
4×36 Belt/6 Disc Sander
(new in box)
Clark 8 Bench Grinder
Chicago Electric 12 Radial
Arm Chop Saw
Craftsman Radial Arm Table
Saw
Drill Press
B&D 7 Power Band Saw
Husky 2 Drawer Tool Box
Work Sharp Knife & Tool
Sharpener
Ryobi 8 Chop Saw
23496 County Rd. 1077 Parker, KS 66072
other Pipe Wrenches
14 Portable Cut Off Saw (in
box)
Shop Vacs
Chicago Electric Sawzaw w/
lots of blades
6 & 4 Bench Vise
Wood Clamps & C Clamps
Bolt Cutters, Hatchets &
Hammers
300 Tape
Dremel Multi Max MM20
IR Air Cut Off Tool (new in
box)
Woodworker Plunge Router 1
3/4hp. (new)
Chicago Electric D-Handle
Drill (new)
Chicago 4 Angle Grinder
(new)
Homier 4 Angle Grinder
Roto Zip/Dremel Tools/Hand
Sanders
Rigid Belt Sander/Rigid 4
Grinder (like new)
Chicago Double Cut Saw (like
new)
Wagner Heat Gun (new in
box)
Senco Hand Nailer (new)
Chain Saw Sharpener (like
new)
Vinyl Tile Cutter
Geared Winch Hand Crank
Come-A-Longs
Boomers
8 Fiberglass Step Ladder
Extension Ladder
Car Ramps
2-100 gal. Propane Bottles
Wagner 7/8 hp. Paint Sprayer
Lots of Hand Tools
Battery Chargers
3/8 Snap-On Torque Wrench
Homier Portable Planer (new)
Hercules 20V Power Drill
(new)
700lb. Capacity Utility Hand
Dennis Wendt, Auctioneer
913-285-0076
Bill McNatt, Auctioneer
913-849-3519
Danny West, Auctioneer
913-731-7687
Office:(913) 898-3337
Toll Free: 800-416-2993
Email: dennis@wendtauction.com
SADDLES
3-14 Riding Saddles
15 Riding Saddle
Misc. Tack
PELLET WOOD STOVE
Fire Chief Pellet Stove, 1800
cfm Blower, holds 32 log,
Thermostatically Controlled
Draft (Brand New)
ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
Forge Stand & Tools
Singer Treddle Sewing
Machine
Pot Belly Wood Stove
Military Tin Stove
WATER WELL DRILLING
MACHINE
Deep Rock Portable Small
Water Well Bore Hole Well
Drilling Machine, 1
21-5 Drilling Pipe
1 Auger
CONSTRUCTION MATERIAL
Misc. Lumber
Misc. Sheeting & Siding
Misc. Windows
FIREARM & ACCESSORIES
Stevens Model 87A 22
Automatic Rifle
Amo Cans
TIRES
265/50R20 Tires (rims bad)
TRAILERS
16 Bumper Trailer w/Electric
Winch
16x6x6 Bumper Hitch 2 Horse
Trailer w/Dressing Room
8X5 Bumper Trailer
View online @
www.wendtauction.com
TERMS OF AUCTION: Cash, check or
credit card w/proper ID. Statements made
day of auction take precedence over written
materials. All items sell as-is, where-is
& without warranty expressed or implied.
Owners or auction company not responsible
for accidents, theft or loss of sale items.
6B
CLASSIFIED
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Happy Ad!
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
SERVICES
Mundell Outdoors, LLC
Happiness is… Enjoying a
delicious dinner with great
friends at the Holy Angels
Church Fall Bazaar. Sunday,
October 20. Serving 11am til
2pm at St. Rose School. sp24t4
Card of Thanks
mundel
Driveway Repair Custom Hauling
Pasture Clearing Excavation
Gradework Gravel Top Soil
(785) 448-8186
Call for a quote.
STATEWIDE
ADVERTISING
1×2
AD
Send your ad to more
than 100 Kansas
newspapers for as little
as $300. Ask about
other states too!
(785) 448- 3121
NOTICES
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tfn
The family of Benny Bennett
would like to express their appreciation and heartfelt thanks to
family and friends who called,
sent cards, flowers, brought food,
memorial donations, or remembered Ben with your thoughts,
prayers and kind acts. Your
thoughtfulness and generosity
will always be remembered. You
have been a true blessing to all of
us during our time of sorrow.
1×2.5
bennet
The Bennett and
Kellerman Families
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Having your
engagement announcement
and photo published Free in the
Review! Go to www.garnett-ks.
com and click the form under
Submit News. Available Free
24 hours/day!
mc1tf
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
2×2
jb
Happiness is… Waverly
Craft Vendor Fair – Saturday,
October
12,
Waverly
Community Building, 9-3.
sp24t3*
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
Happiness is… Graduates of
Garnett High School visiting
with old friends of the Class
of 59 on Saturday, October 5,
10am at Prairie Belles, 130 E.
5th, Garnett.
oc1t1*
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Warehouse/Delivery Person
2×2 Full or part time.
Box truck driving helpful.
baumans
Call Baumans or stop by
805 N. Maple Garnett (785) 448-3216
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2×4
AD
CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION
Saturday October 5 , 2019
10:00AM
TRACTORS EQUIPMENT VEHICLES
LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT SHOP TOOLS
TRAILERS TRAVEL TRAILERS BOAT
MISCELLANEOUS
A lot more items expected!
Keep checking Kansas Auctions.net
for more listings and pictures!
Sale will be held
Yoders Countr y Store
22800 NW 1700 Road Garnett, KS
2 miles west of Garnett on 7th Street
YODER AUCTION/
REALTY SERVICE
Auctioneers:
Ben Yoder …. 785-448-4419
James Yoder …. 620-228-3548
Jr Miller …. 620-200-3007
Wingman: Lavern Keim
LUNCH SERVED
by Yoder Country Store
CLERKS:
C. LICKTEIG
R. SCHMUCKER
RESTROOMS AVAILABLE
Terms of Sale: Cash or Approved Check Nothing Removed Until
Settled For Not Responsible for Accidents or Theft
Statements day of sale take precedence over printed material.
Production
2×7 ekaeProcess Operators
East Kansas Agri-Energy, LLC, an Ethanol/
Renewable Diesel manufacturer in Garnett, Kansas
is looking for Production Process Operators. This
position will be responsible for various operational
duties including operational data collection/entry,
product sample collection, quality control laboratory
testing, sanitation duties and all other aspects of a
process operation. This person must have positive
work ethics, display strong motivational skills with
the ability to work independently and in a team
environment with emphasis on efficiency and safety.
This individual must also perform the required
duties accurately with attention to detail and the
ability to complete all assignments by specified
deadlines. Applicants must be high school graduates,
have the ability to lift up to 50 lbs, manage multiple
tasks and multiple priorities simultaneously, work
12 hour rotating shifts and possess fluent computer skills. Experience in chemistry, hydro-treating
processes and experience in a 24 hour continuous
manufacturing process is preferred but not required.
Please apply in person at East Kansas Agri-Energy,
LLC, 1304 South Main, Garnett, KS 66032.
You may also submit a resume with references to
Shelly.Newport@ekaellc.com, fax (785) 448-2884 or
through our company website at www.ekaellc.com.
Applications will be accepted until the positions are
filled. No phone calls please.
2×7 ekae
Ethanol Plant Material Handler
East Kansas Agri-Energy, LLC, an Ethanol/
Renewable Diesel manufacturer in Garnett, Kansas
is looking for a Material Handler in our Ethanol
Plant that will be responsible for various operational
duties including the ability to operate a skid-steer
loader, front-end loader, and a tele-handler loader.
This person will have positive work ethics, display
strong motivational skills with the ability to work
independently and in a team environment with
emphasis on efficiency and safety. This individual
must also perform the required duties accurately
with attention to detail and the ability to complete
all assignments by specified deadlines. Applicants
must be high school graduates, have the ability
to lift up to 50 lbs, manage multiple tasks and
multiple priorities simultaneously, work 12 hour
rotating shifts and possess fluent computer skills.
Experience in 24 hour manufacturing process is
helpful but not required. Please apply in person
at East Kansas Agri-Energy, LLC, 1304 South
Main, Garnett, KS 66032. You may also submit
your resume with references to
Shelly.Newport@ekaellc.com, fax (785) 448-2884, or
through our company website at www.ekaellc.com.
Applications will be accepted until the position is
filled. No phone calls please. E/O/E

