Anderson County Review — October 10, 2023
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from October 10, 2023. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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SINCE
1865
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,KS,KS,and
and
communities.
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C O P Y P R I C E O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
October 10, 2023
Probitas, Veritas,
Integritas In Summa
SINCE 1865 157th Year, No. 40
www.garnett-ks.com | (785) 448-3121 | review@garnett-ks.com
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Cobras, Corvettes, solar eclipse add spice to 23 LGGPR
GARNETT The historic Lake
Garnett Raceway roars back to life
once more Octoner 13-15 as the Lake
Garnett Grand Prix Revival (LGGPR)
marks its 10th Anniversary in 2023.
This years celebration holds special significance for
organizers and for
track history, as
it com-
memorates the 60th anniversary of
the iconic Corvette vs. Cobra showdown from the summer of 1963, in
what sponsors are billing as a must-attend event for sports car and racing
enthusiasts.
The road around Lake Garnett
starting just north of the
swimming pool hosted
10th anniversary of event
to showcase classic 1963
face-off of racing giants
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
sanctioned SCCA National races from
1959-1972 until safety concerns eventually silenced the engines
and the road became
a ghost track
amid U.S. racing
lore until a small
group of Kansas
City
area
sports
car
enthusiasts
staged the first
track revival.
The
events
become one of
the communitys most
popular annual attractions,
boasting some 300 cars among various
competition and display categories.
This years celebration of the
Corvette v. Cobra face-off is a tribute
to one of the classic competions of
U.S. racing history. In 1963, the Lake
Garnett raceway witnessed a historic
battle between the factory Chevrolet
Corvette team and Carroll Shelbys
Shelby American factory team of 289
Cobras. Shelby himself was on-hand
to witness his legendary drivers Ken
Miles, Dave MacDonald and Bob
Johnson go head-to-head with ace
Corvette pilots Dick Thompson, Don
Yenko, and Grady Davis. Owners and
enthusiasts of these cars have been
invited to join the LGGPR this year
for a weekend of high-octane excitement, camaraderie, and nostalgia.
The LGGPR car show includes a
stunning display of vintage race cars,
classic sports cars, and modern performance automobiles, showcasing
the best of American and international automotive heritage. But the
static displays pale in comparison to
the roaring, heart-pounding on-track
action of race car exhibitions and
high-performance driving sessions for
street cars on the historic 2.8-mile
road course. Multiple track groups
are available for drivers of every experience level, from total novice to veteran racer. Those categories include:
Adrenaline-Packed Autocross:
Taking place on Saturday morning at
the Garnett Municipal Airport, drivers will navigate a challenging course
of cones, pushing their sports cars to
the limit in a quest for precision and
speed.
Eclipse Spectacle: As if the 2023
celebration couldnt get any more special, mother nature herself is joinSEE EVENT ON PAGE 5
Two join Garnett city
race as write-in candidates
Pharmacist, Growing Garnett
principal add perspectives,
more variety to Nov. 7 contest
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Two Garnett residents will
enter the November race for Garnett City
Commission as writein candidates in a field
that already has two
official filings, amid
months of controversy
surrounding city government.
Paula Scott ran
unsuccessfully for city
Scott
commission in 2016 and
sought appointment
to two subsequent city
commission vacancies. Nate Wiehl is a
former campaign treasurer for one of former 5th District Kansas Representative
Mark Samsels campaigns, and also
unsuccessfully sought appointment to a
city commission seat in 2021.
Scott and Wiehl will face incumbent
Jason Sheahan, who was appointed early
in 2022 after the death of commissioner
Cody Gettler in November 2021, and
Mark Powls, who filed for the office by
the June filing deadline. Only Powls
and Sheahans names will appear on
the November 7 election ballot, with the
option to write-in an unfiled candidate
underneath the printed name block.
City government has been steeped in
controversy surrounding the Garnett
Recreation Department for much of the
past year, after complaints about the
departments operation and its former
director Phil Bures
resulted in public
actions by Sheahan
to pressure Bures
into rectifying what
Sheahan characterized
as various discrepancies in the departments
operation.
That feud culminated
Wiehl
in Bures resignation
after a blow-up at
a city commission meeting in August
between Sheahan, Bures and members
of the citys parks and recreation board,
and a subsequent public castigation of
Sheahan for his approach and his behavior by fellow commissioner Mark Locke
at another meeting later that month.
Wiehl said he hoped his election might
bring an element of civility back to the
commission.
I know Jason outside of the commisSEE WRITE-INS ON PAGE 8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW / DANE HICKS
Bailey Roehl and Nash Cardell were crowned queen and king of Central Heights Fall Homecoming Friday night
when the Vikings won a royal night victory 42-0 over Northern Heights to bring their season record to 3-3.
Davids follows Dems, cranky GOP to oust McCarthy
Historic action defines
division among Repubs
as Democrats pile on
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WASHINGTON,
D.C.
Following her consistent
voting pattern following
Democrats in the U.S. House,
3rd District Congresswoman
Sharice Davids as expected
broke with the remaining
Kansas congressional delegation last week in a Republican-
led vote to oust House Speaker
Kevin McCarthy of California.
Davids, a
Democrat,
voted with
the 216-210
majority on a
Republicanled initiative
to
declare
the
speakers
office
Davids
vacant, after
a handful of
conservative Republicans led
by Florida congressman Matt
Gaetz joined Democrats to
remove McCarthy from power.
It was the first time a sitting
Speaker of the House has been
removed from power by the
members of the Congress.
Kansas
congressmen
Jake LaTurner, Ron Estes
and Tracey Mann all voted
against the motion to remove
McCarthy. Seven Republicans
joined every Democrat in the
House to tip the slim margin in
favor Gaetzs motion to vacate
the chair. Those Republicans
were Andy Biggs of Arizona,
Ken Buck of Colorado, Tim
Burchett of Tennessee, Eli
Crane of Arizona, Bob Good of
Virginia, Nancy Mace of South
Carolina and Matt Rosendale
of Montana.
Conservatives in the House
were angry with McCarthy
over a deal he made with
Democrats for a Continuing
Resolution to fund the U.S.
Government last month and
avert what would have been
a partial shutdown of services
if no money was approved to
fund them. Budget deficits and
a growing national debt that
SEE ACTION ON PAGE 3
Ottawa bee keeper wins sweet victory for home-based businesses
BY PATRICK RICHARDSON
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2023 / SUBMITTED
More than 200 junior high through high school students from area
schools learned about vintage equipment at Fridays Education Day
sponsored in conjunction with the Anderson County Flywheelers
weekend show and exhibit. Ninety tractors exhibited in the event
with 40 taking part in Saturdays equipment parade.
THE SENTINEL
OTTAWA People in Ottawa,
Kansas who want home-based
businesses to sell honey and
produce won a victory recently, thanks to Ellen Finnerty
and Kansas Justice Institute.
Finnerty, 52, sued the city
of Ottawa, Kansas earlier this
year challenging the citys prohibition on home-based businesses that involve animal
care of any type.
However, according to
a release from the Kansas
Justice Institute, four months
after she teamed with Kansas
Justice Institute to file a lawsuit challenging Ottawas
unconstitutional home-based
business prohibitions, the
City of Ottawa relented and
changed their ordinances to
allow her the chance to supplement her income.
Sweet! What a great victory, not only for me, but for
everyone who wants to live
a natural, healthy life, and
earn an honest living from it,
Finnerty said. After the city
told me no, Im so thankful
for Kansas Justice Institute. I
could not have done this without them.
The prohibition was particularly odd, as city code did not
prevent Finnerty from keeping bees she simply wasnt
allowed to sell any honey.
Were incredibly pleased
the city changed its laws so
Ms. Finnerty can start her
dream business, KJI litiga-
tion director Sam MacRoberts,
himself a beekeeper, said.
The city correctly recognized
that it shouldnt be a crime to
use your own backyard to produce homegrown vegetables
and home-raised honey.
People have gardened and
safely raised honey for thousands of years, and the city,
to its great credit, understood
there wasnt a good reason
to prevent Ellen from startSEE SWEET ON PAGE 3
2
NEWS IN
BRIEF
POLITICAL FORUM
Garnett BPW along with
Anderson County Farm Bureau
is hosting a Political Forum on
October 19th, Town Hall Center
at 7 pm. Both Commissioners
and the school board have
been invited to the forum.
Open to the public.
COMMUNITY BREAKFAST
On Saturday, October 14th,
the Pottawatomie Township
Ruritans will sponsor a breakfast at the Lane Community
Center, from 7 a.m. – 9 a.m.,
with the proceeds going for
community service.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 breakfast will
be Sunday, October 15, from 9
a.m. – 1 p.m. Biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage and eggs will be served.
KEIM BENEFIT SUPPER
Mont Ida Church will host a
benefit supper for Mahlon Keim
on Saturday, Oct. 21, from 3
p.m. – 8 p.m. Haystacks (AKA
Taco Salad), assorted homemade desserts, coffee, tea and
water will be served. Free will
offering. All proceeds will go
towards Keims medical bills.
GCC MEMBERSHIP SPECIAL
Join Garnett Country Club for
2024 with $100 down payment
and receive the rest of 2023 for
free! Additionally, new members receive 20% off their first
year. Membership forms may
be obtained at the clubhouse or
online at www.golfgarnett.com.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
OCTOBER 2, 2023
Chairman Leslie McGhee called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM on
October 2, 2023 at the Anderson
County
Commission
Room.
Attendance: Leslie McGhee, Present:
David Pracht, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The pledge of
allegiance was recited. Minutes from
the previous meeting were approved
as presented.
Road & Bridge
Ethan Lickteig, Road Supervisor,
met with the commission. The chip
and seal for 1600 Rd is set to begin
October 9th by Vance Brothers. While
they are in Anderson County they are
to complete resurfacing east 4th Ave
at Garnett city limits to the railroad
tracks. The department is running low
on larger pipe for culverts so Ethan
will be getting quotes for a load and
return for approval. A couple motor
graders broke down last week and
needed replacement parts. Both pieces of equipment will be repaired this
week.
4H Week Proclamation
Jeanette Stinebaugh, Frontier
Extension District, and Hank Newton,
4H member, met with the commission. She presented a proclamation
for National 4H week of October 1
– October 7. Hank gave an overview
of how 4H has helped him as an individual. Jeanette read through the presented proclamation. Commissioner
Pracht moved and Commissioner
Mersman seconded to proclaim
October 1-October 7 as National 4H
week in Anderson County, Kansas. All
voted yes.
Emergency Management
Mark
Locke,
Emergency
Management Director, met with the
commission. He gave an update
on the radio system and that TFM
Communication was present last
week to fix some issues. Discussion
was held on handheld and mobile
radios for the department when the
county switches to the 800 system.
Theres a possibly of an exchange
program that the county can partake
in with a larger county who is getting
rid of theirs.
Executive Session
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
enter into executive session for 10
minutes for non-elected personnel.
All voted yes. Commissioners; Julie
Wettstein, County Clerk; and Mark
Locke, Emergency Management
Director were present. Commissioner
Pracht moved and Commissioner
Mersman seconded to exit out of
executive session. All voted yes. No
action taken. Commissioner Pracht
moved and Commissioner Mersman
seconded to enter into executive session for 5 minutes for non-elected personnel. All voted yes. Commissioners;
Julie Wettstein, County Clerk; and
Mark Locke, Emergency Management
Director were present. Commissioner
Pracht moved and Commissioner
Mersman seconded to exit out of
executive session. All voted yes. No
action taken.
Mark Powls – Kansas Property
Rights Coalition
Mark Powls, Garnett, and Wesley
Keller, Garnett, met with the commission. They presented a resolution that
was read aloud to the commissioners
and audience. The resolution was
titled to reinforce the constitutional
requirement of this governing body,
its employees, and its committees, to
protect the inherent right of every individual to own and control his/her own
real and/or personal property without
infringement by government or any
entity, organization, or individual, foreign or domestic. Discussion was held
on the resolution presented. No action
was taken.
Law Enforcement Center
Bond Reserve
The Law Enforcement Center Bond
Reserve fund held the funds to pay
for the jail bond which was generated
from a portion of out of county inmate
housing. The fund currently has
Gorrells 101st birthday
Ruth Gorrell will be celebrating her 101st birthday on
Thursday as she was born
October 12, 1922.
Anyone wishing to send Ruth
a card can mail them to her
at 806 W 4th Ave, Garnett, KS
66032.
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3
Gorrell
NOVEMBER 7, 2023
VOTE
PAULA E. SCOTT
2×6
Paula Scott
2×4
Yutzy
WRITE-IN CANDIDATE
GARNETT CITY COMMISSION
Resident of Garnett for 31 years
Attended almost all Garnett City Commission
and Joint City/County Commission meetings
since 2013
Attended all Garnett City Commission budget
and code workshops since 2017
Commissioner on the Garnett Planning
Commission / Zoning Board of Appeals since
2019
Coordinator for the Growing Garnett
Community Heart & Soul project since 2020
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
Paid for by Paula E. Scott
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
October 8-14
These area businesses are proud to recognize the leadership of our local fire departments:
Eric Seabolt Colony/Kincaid Fire Chief Merle Edgecomb Harris Fire Chief Randy Bunnel Welda Fire Chief
Daryl Patton Bush City Fire Chief Zach Hill Greeley Fire Chief Gaylon Corley Westphalia Fire Chief Wes Skillman Garnett Fire Chief
Adamson Bros.
Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett
(785) 448-6122
Barnes Seed Service, LLC
Garnett
(785) 304-2500
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Bluestem Farm & Ranch
Emporia
(620) 352-5502
Bones Rock Yard
Ottawa
(785) 242-3070
Flynn Appliance Center
Iola
(620) 365-2538
PrairieLand Partners
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Tom Adams Construction
Garnett
(785) 448-3997
Brand N Iron
Princeton
www.thebrandniron.com
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Quality Structures
Richmond
800-374-6988
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Midwest Gun & Supply
Paola
(913) 557-4867
6th Ave Boutique &
Western Wear
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Wittman NAPA Auto Parts
Garnett
(785) 448-6611
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett
(785) 448-5720
CARSTAR
Ottawa
(785) 242-8916
D&M Mini Barns
Garnett
(785) 504-9625
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett
(785) 448-2888
Farmers State Bank
Garnett
www.fsbkansas.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Midwest Collision
Paola
(913) 294-4016
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
Yutzy Custom Structures
Garnett
(800) 823-8609
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
CHURCH
JANUARY 5, 1925 – OCTOBER 1, 2023
Services for Doris Church,
age 98, of Lone Elm, Kansas were
October 6, 2023 at Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service in
Garnett. Doris passed away on
Sunday, October 1, 2023 in Iola,
Kansas.
FARRAR
OCTOBER 8, 1946 – OCTOBER 2, 2023
Services for Gary W. Farrar,
age 76, of Garnett, Kansas,
were October 6, 2023, at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel in Garnett,
Kansas. Gary passed away
on October 2, 2023 at home in
Garnett.
BLOMQUIST
APRIL 6, 1949 – OCTOBER 3, 2023
Services for Sharon E.
Blomquist, age 74, of Garnett,
Kansas, are Tuesday, October
10, 2023, at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel
in Garnett, Kansas. Burial will
follow in the Garnett Cemetery.
Sharon passed away on October
3, 2023, at the Anderson County
Hospital in Garnett.
GARDNER
NOVEMBER 25, 1933 – SEPTEMBER 19, 2023
Services for Russell Flynn
Gardner, 89 of Jefferson,
Maryland, will be held at 11:00
AM on Saturday, October 14,
2023, at St. Teresa Catholic
Cemetery in Westphalia,
Kansas. Russell passed away
Tuesday, September 19, 2023.
SWEET…
FROM PAGE 1
ing her home-based business.
Were thrilled that Ellen can
start her dream business.
Finnerty is a single mother who works full-time as a
machine operator. To help
support her family, Finnerty
wanted the opportunity to
sell homegrown produce and
home-raised honey at the local
farmers market. Now she can.
Ellen didnt sue the city
for money, MacRoberts said.
She was fighting to protect
everyones rights under the
Kansas Constitution the
right to earn an honest living
and to be able to use your own
backyard for a safe and peaceful purpose.
However, he said, the problem persists throughout the
state with codes which make
it difficult to operate a homebased business.
This is an important victory in Ottawa, but our work
isnt done, MacRoberts said.
Cities throughout the state
continue to improperly, and
unconstitutionally, restrict
home-based businesses.
This case is part of KJIs
litigation campaign challenging laws that interfere with
Kansans ability to produce,
market, and buy foods of their
choosing. This case is also
part of KJIs litigation efforts
to make it easier for families
to earn an honest living. In
2019, KJI successfully sued the
State of Kansas over its raw
milk advertising prohibition,
and in 2020, KJI sued the State
over its occupational licensing
requirement involving eyebrow threading.
ACTION…
FROM PAGE 1
now totals more than $33 trillion have been a primary focus
of conservatives, who warn
budget cutting measures are
the only means of controlling
the debt which could rack the
U.S. and world economy.
Davids
represents
Anderson, Franklin, Miami
and Johnson counties and a
portion of Wyandotte county.
Obituary charges: Full obituaries are published as submitted in
the Review at the rate of 18 per word and include a photo at no
charge. Abbreviated death notices are published at no charge. A
photo may be added to a death notice for a $10 fee. Payment may
be made through your funeral home or directly to the Review.
(785) 448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
2×3
Agency West
205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
Our Ottawa office:
706 N. Lindenwood Dr.
Hannah Morgan, Agent
Olathe, Ks. 66062
427 S Main St. Ottawa
(913) 661-0466
785-521-2030
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker,
Tucker, Agent
Courtney
Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: taco platters, beef/chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: bbq & burgers, open-face roast
beef or 1/2 lb. cheeseburger
ALL AVAILABLE
Wednesday: Fried chicken
FAMILY-STYLE!
Thursday: Meatloaf
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
Every Sunday
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
11
a.m. – 2 p.m.
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
2×3
1-stop
PAN-FRIED
CHICKEN
Sunday: Homemade pan-fried chicken w/sides
2×2 Good
Shepherd
Homemade
3
OBITUARIES
How many people are waiting Senior Center pitch results
to be introduced to Jesus
for Sept. 28 & Oct. 5
The epistles are replete with
illustrations of how Jesus turned
rough, uneducated men into
disciples. In Mark 1:17-18, we
see Jesus call Simon, Andrew,
James and John. Come follow
me, Jesus said, and I will make
you fishers of men. John the
Baptist, whose sole expressed
purpose was to prepare the way
for Jesus, no doubt influenced
these men as they would have
been aware of Johns ministry at
the Jordan River. We are told the
whole Judean countryside and all
the people of Jerusalem went out
to John. Did these men have a
complete understanding of what
Come follow me meant? I doubt
they did. This was the initial
phase of these men becoming disciples.
In John 14:1-3 we read of an
event that occurred close to the
end of Jesus ministry. Jesus says
to his apostles, Dont let your
hearts be troubled. Trust in God,
trust also in me. In my Fathers
house are many rooms, if it were
not so, I would have told you. And
if I go and prepare a place for you,
I will come back and take you
to be with me that you may also
be where I am. The time that
elapsed between these two events
represents the training period for
these men. Jesus does not reveal
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
what the outcome will be for these
men when he issues the Come
follow me statement but begins
to reveal the impending kingdom
in this statement. The success
or failure of Gods kingdom rested with these men. If they had
not accepted the call of Jesus to
Come follow me there would be
no prepared place for the disciples or us. Jesus left a very clear
footprint for us to follow. He
drew people to himself, he won
their confidence and inspired
their faith, he opened to them the
way of salvation and called them
to a decision. Jesus appealed to
the one need most people didnt
realize they had. The need for a
Savior. How many people are out
there waiting for you to introduce
them to Jesus? What we do with
the light of knowledge we have
will be part of our own judgment.
Garnett Public Library to
host Solarbration party
Celebrate the
eclipse with the
Garnett Public
Library at our
Solarbration
on
Saturday,
October
14th
between 11:30
a.m
12:30
p.m. when the
library will host
an eclipse watch
party.
This eclipse
is known as
an annular
eclipse
and
occurs when the moon, at
its farthest point away from
Earth, passes between the
Earth and sun creating a ring
of fire. Annular eclipses happen every one or two years.
Glasses to view the eclipse and
refreshments will be provided.
This is a B.Y.O.C. event:
(Bring Your Own Chair).
This fun unique event on
Saturday, October 14th, 2023,
at 11:30am-12:30pm. is free to
the public and fun for all ages.
If you have questions, please
call the library at 785-448-3388.
Working to make a life
Jackie Mundt, Pratt County
farmer and rancher
Fall harvest is in full swing
on our central Kansas farm.
Do you live to work or work
to live? This question of mindset and philosophy has been
a source of intergenerational
tension for a while now. Baby
boomers see working hard to
provide for their families and
millennials work to support a
great life outside their working
hours. In the end both groups
are working to make a living.
In my world, neither of these
is correct; work takes on many
forms in my life a career
where my living is earned, jobs
completed around the farm
that keep the place running
and time spent on community
activities. They are work in
function but dont merely represent earnings to provide for
a family or the pride in a job
well done. These things are my
work and my life.
For weeks our house has
been in fall harvest mode
which means non-stop action.
Someone is likely driving a
combine or grain cart, fueling
or shuttling vehicles, farming to prep the soil, running
a drill and sometimes all of
these are happening at once.
Our house feels like a rest stop
where meals are eaten, and the
shorter days mean leaving and
coming home in the dark. We
exercise communication and
teamwork as we put the needs
of the farm over our own comfort. Its chaotic, exciting and
exhausting.
Life off the farm doesnt stop
for harvest. Recently we helped
run our local Oktoberfest to
raise money for community
philanthropy. One of the best
things about this event is the
group of 16 people who serve
on the planning committee to
make it happen. This group
of working professionals and
business owners is made up
of parents to small children
(including three sets of twins),
leaders in churches or serving on community and civic
boards, and we even have some
pursuing advanced degrees.
Everyone on the committee is
stepping away from busy lives;
we are making sacrifices and
working because we take ownership in making our community a great place to live.
My real job is fairly exciting this time of year, too. Most
of the cooperatives employees are focused on harvest
and helping our members get
wheat in the ground. My focus
is on planting a different type
of seeds. The start of the school
year provides lots of opportunities for me to give tours of
our facilities and classroom
presentations about the value
of cooperatives, working at the
cooperative and making the
decision to live rural by choice.
Farmers are often recognized for their work ethic
which might be because to
farmers work is more than just
doing a job, it is our life. We
arent paid by hours or jobs
done; we spend months investing time, energy and resources
not knowing how much or even
if it will all pay off in the end.
This is the work-life philosophy that underlies my life.
Much of what I do has little
instant gratification or payoff.
I have to have faith that my
time, effort and skills will yield
something great in the future.
They say that if you love
what you do you will never
work a day in your life. I see it
slightly differently, if you love
what you do, you gladly work
hard to make things happen.
When you fill your life with
work that you love or do it for
people you love it becomes so
much easier.
The question shouldnt be
living to work or working to
live? It should be are you working to make a living or a life?
"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.
On September 28th the
Thursday Pitch group met for
10 games of 13-point pitch.
These are the results from
that evening: Jan Wards won
high with nine wins out of 10
games; Loydene West won the
50/50; Mike Kilet took low and
Dorothy Spencer had the most
perfect hands with four.
On October 5th we had a
gathering of eighteen players
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2
$903,709.01 in it after the jail bond
was paid in full. Commissioner Pracht
moved and Commissioner Mersman
seconded to transfer $903,709.01
from the law enforcement center bond
reserve fund to the general fund and
close the law enforcement center
bond reserve fund. All voted yes.
Abatement
Abatement B23-190 was approved
as presented.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
Geron Allen Smith and Rita Ann
Smith to Geron Allen Smith Trustee,
Rita Ann Smith Trustee, Geron Allen
Smith Trust Dated 7/11/2023 and Rita
Ann Smith Trust Dated 7/11/2023:
Parcel 1: the sw/4 of se/4 and the e/2
of the se/4 of 13-21-19 except reservation on that portion of land east
of creek with is described as follows:
commencing at the se corner of the
land herein being conveyed, thence
north on section line until it intersects
the creek, thence north and west with
the creek to a point where it intersects
the n/2 section line, also except the
folliwng tract of land: commencing at
the se corner of the se/4 of 13-21-19,
thence west 450 feet, thence north
300 feet, thence east 450 feet, thence
south 300 feet to the pob. parcel 2:
a tract of land situated in all of the
nw/4 of se/4 together with a portion
of the s/2 of the ne/4 lying west of
the centerline of the south fork of
Pottawatomie Creek as field located
in october 2022, all being in 13-21-19
and being a portion of the tract of land
descrbed as set forth in the warranty
deed recorded april 22, 2022 in the
office of the register of deeds for
said county and state in blook 186 at
page 75. said tract of land being now
more particularly described as follows:
beginning at the sw corner of the ne
corner of aforesaid section 13; thence
n003934w along the west line of
the ne/4 of said section 13, a distance
of 207.02 feet to a point 207.00 feet
north of the south line of the ne/4 of
said section 13 as measured perpendicular to said south line thereof;
thence n882846e along a line 207
feet north of and parallel with the
south line of the ne/4 of said section
13, a distance of 410.05 feet; thence
n003934w along a line parallel with
the west line of the ne/4 of said section 13, a distance of 93.01 feet to a
point 300.00 feet north of the south
line of the ne/4 of said section 13 as
measured perpendicular to said south
line thereof; thence n882846e
along a line 300.00 feet north of
and parallel with the south line of
ne/4 of said section 13, a distance of
1,356.09 feet; thence n200919e,
365.87 feet to a point 640.00 feet
north of the south line of the ne/4 of
said section 13 as measured perpendicular to said south line thereof;
thence n882846e along a line 640
feet north and parallel with the south
line of thene/4 of said section 13, a
distance of 266.20 feet to the intersection with the centerline of aforesaid
south fork of Pottawatomie Creek;
thence southerly along the centerline
of said creek, the following courses
and distances; s364333e, 25.81
feet, thence s285321e, 140.24
feet, thence s114804e, 198.04
feet; thence s232323e, 124.78
feet; thence s560147e, 72.30
feet, thence s540036e, 88.40
feet, thence s531824e, 81.65 feet;
thence s380458e, 46.55 feet to
a point on the south line of the ne/4
of said section 13, being also a point
on the north line of the se/4 of said
section 13, said point being 89.96 feet
west of the ne corner of the se/4 of
said section 13 as measured along
the north line thereof as shown on
the survey recorded january 24, 2019
in the office of the register of deeds
for said county and state in book 112
mcl page 123; thence departing from
centerline of said creek, being now
along the north line of the se/4 of said
section 13 and along the north line
of aforesaid survey filed in book 112
mcl page 123, the following courses
and distances; s882846w 1,232.04
feet to the nw corner of the ne/4 of
the se/4 of said seciton 13; thence
s005422e, along the west line of
the ne/4 of the se/4 of said section
13, a distance of 1,322.87 feet to the
sw corner of the ne/4 of the se/4 of
said section 13; thence s883015w,
along the north line of the sw/4 of the
se/4 of said section 13, a distance of
1,316.78 feet to the nw corner of the
sw/4 of the se/4 of said section 13,
being also a point on the west line
of the se/4 of said section 13; thence
n010755w along the west line of
the se/4 of said section 13, a distance
of 1,322.25 feet to the pob. containing
2,563,842 square feet or 58.858 acres
more or less.
Brian R Weller and Christin L
Weller to Howard Ernest Egger II and
Thomas D Egger: The s/2 of lot 1 and
the s/2 of the e/2 of lot 2, block 15
in Chapmans Addition to the City of
Garnett.
Caleb Anderegg and Ashley
with these results; High went
to Ray Wards with eight wins
out of 10 games; Jackie Waddle
won the 50/50, Mike Kilet took
low and Martha Beachy had
the most perfect hands with
five.
Come join us on Thursday
evening promptly at six
o'clock at the Senior Center.
Always room for one more.
Jan Wards reporting.
Anderegg to Terry Hermreck and
Laura Hermreck: Lots 9 and 10 in
block 7 of Chapmans Addition to the
City of Garnett.
Stanley Z Martin and Lingjing Men
to Evan J Smith Whitmore and Evan
J Smith Whitmore A/K/A: The west 13
feet of lot 2 and all of lots 3 and 4 in
block 64 to the City of Garnett.
David G Brecheisen and Marilyn
R Brecheisen to Henry L Yoder and
Stephanie M Yoder: The sw/4 of ne/4
and the n/2 of se/4, except one acre in
the sw corner thereof used for school
purposes, all in 24-21-19.
Karl A Frazier to Manford C Carr
Sr and Susan Grogan: All that part of
the w/2 of the ne/4 of 36-19-20, north
of the Missouri-Pacific Railrod and the
State Highway.
Mararete Lickteig and Margareta
Lickteig A/K/A to Margareta Lickteig
Trustee and Margareta Lickteig Living
Trust Dtd 9/12/2023: S/2 of lot 8, block
25 in the City of Greeley.
Marilyn Sue Brooks, Marilyn S
Brooks A/K/A and Dwaine K Brooks
to Marilyn S Brooks Trust and Dwaine
K & Marilyn S Brooks Trust Dated
3-30-2018: A tract in w2, se4 26-20-17
described as follows: Com at pt 182
east of swcor said w2 se4, thence
north 200, thence east 700, thence
south 200, thence west 700 to pob; &
nw4 ne4 35-20-17.
ANDERSON COUNTY ARRESTS FILED
On September 27, Akira Raiden
Orsby, Garnett, was arrested for criminal restraint and domestic battery.
On September 30, Akira Raiden
Orsby, Garnett, was arrested for violation of protection order; condition of
release.
On September 30, Billy Wayne
Castagno, Baldwin, was arrested for
battery and domestic battery.
On September 30, Jessica
Elizabeth Renea Castagno, Baldwin,
was arrested for domestic battery;
bodily harm w/deadly weapon,
domestic battery; physical contact in
rude manner, aggravated endangering a child; reckless <18, and battery;
causing rude physical contact.
On September 30, Brenden Cole
Robbins, Ottawa, was arrested for
driving while suspended or revoked,
for not having vehicle registered,
Kansas insurance violation and violation of Offender Registration Act; 1st
conviction.
On October 2, William Ivan
Cockrum, Kansas City, Missouri, was
arrested for two counts of failing to
appear.
On October 2, Ashely Ann
Cavender, Mindenmines, Missouri,
was arrested for failure to appear.
On October 4, Javier Isidro
Romero, Lawrence, was booked as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for Murder
in the 1st degree; intent/premed.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Giovanna Rodriguez was booked
into jail on March 3, 2021.
Isidro Madrid was booked into jail
on August 12, 2022.
Sean Williams was booked into jail
on August 22, 2022.
Eric Howell was booked into jail on
April 20, 2023.
Joshua Caddell was booked into
jail on July 15, 2023.
Eric Collins was booked into jail on
August 2, 2023.
ANDERSON COUNTY
JAIL FARM-INS
Matthew Claycamp was booked
into jail on June 12, 2023.
Tanner Vansickle was booked into
jail on July 13, 2023.
Patrick Stoneking was booked into
jail on July 13, 2023.
Cole Bridge was booked into jail on
July 27, 2023.
Robert Alcher was booked into jail
on August 25, 2023.
Andrew Shubert was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
James Waggoner was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
Andrew Jamison was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
Christopher Johnson was booked
into jail on September 5, 2023.
Ronnie Masoner was booked into
jail on September 5, 2023.
Michael Shaw was booked into jail
on September 8, 2023.
Zachary Maddux was booked into
jail on September 13, 2023.
Austin Hutchison was booked
into jail on September 20, 2023.
Brandon Norris was booked into jail
on September 21, 2023.
Javier Romero as booked into jail
on September 4, 2023.
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in the Reviews
Business Directory for
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
OPINION
Republicans and the pandemic of dumb
In trying to illustrate the pandemic of stupidity that afflicts the Republican Party and scuttles
its attempts to reverse 60 years of nonsensical
Leftist chokehold on our countrys culture and
politics, its hard to decide what pandemic-style
movie best fits my point.
All the classic Get-Sick-And-Die Hollywood
blockbusters feature an evil virus of some kind.
The Andromeda Strain; Outbreak; Contagion; 12
Monkeys; The Omega Man all of them conjure
up a world where a virus invades the bodies
of humanity from outer space or some messed
up monkey or maybe a lab in Wuhan, China.
Indeed, a virus based in dumb would probably
never survive to infect vast numbers of the population. Think for a minute about a pandemic
version of Dumb & Dumber; if Darwin is right,
a virus so stupid would never survive to evolve
and morph into anything that makes a great
Hollywood disaster movie.
But Republicans are witnessing the outcome
of such a virus one for which theres no known
source or apparently an antidote. Only viral
stupidity can produce the outcomes Republicans
have inflicted upon themselves over the past
year or so with the likes of Matt Gaetz in the
U.S. Congress last week, and earlier in Kansas
with Dennis Pyle and the 80,000 yard gnomes
who voted for Arlyn Briggs in the GOP primary
against Derek Schmidt.
So the imagery that comes into mind in
this illustration that Ive already tried too
hard to visualize for you is a virus that affects
Republicans not like some respiratory affliction
or zombie flick, but instead like a Three Stooges
film where the principals spend excruciating
swaths of time smacking each other on the heads
with 2x4s and slapping each other across the
chops. These Republicans arent being transformed into brain eating ghouls; theyre poking
each other in the eyes and going Nyuck, nyuck,
nyuck.
And that stupidity rains Democrat disaster on
Kansas and on the country.
Last weeks ouster of House Speaker Kevin
McCarthy was classic GOP circular firing squad
pandemic stuff. Gaetz and an infected group of
GOP hard liners had their pants in a wad because
McCarthy cut a deal with Democrats to avoid a
financial shutdown of the U.S. Government one
which assuredly would have been blamed on
Republicans. All it took was Gatezs introduction of the poison pill measure that GOP cranks
forced McCarthy to relent to in order to initially
elect him speaker and a handful of Republican
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
fops to join Democrats in the House who rightfully couldnt contain their jubilation.
All Joe Bidens accomplices in Congress had
to do was sit back and watch. When youre enemys about to shoot himself in the foot, dont
interrupt him.
How similar was the story last year in
Kansas when 80,000 GOP stooges mounted their
we-dont-like-Derek-Schmidt-because-hes
too-tall campaign and followed accused felon
Arlyn Briggs in a protest vote in the Kansas
Republican Primary. Briggs was charged with
threatening Anderson County Sheriffs deputies
and trying to lure them to his property at the
time, but 80,000 geniuses in the party thought
he was a better choice than an accomplished,
longtime legislator who was the sitting Attorney
General of the state.
Of course that was a precursor to Hiawatha
Huckster Dennis Pyle swapping his GOP credentials to become an Independent and petitioning
his way onto the November 22 ballot for the governors race with a ton of supporting Democrat
signatures, mind you. Between Pyles die-on-every hill followers and some nobody Libertarian
and Republicans who just decided to sit this one
out, they all gifted us with another four years of
Lockdown Laura Kelly.
The dumb and dumber duo of Pyle and Briggs
pulled the rug out from under sensible government in Kansas just like Gaetz and his nabobs in
the House of Representatives decided throwing
out the steering wheel was better than driving
down a bumpy road.
This kind of genius is just the stuff to breathe
new life into the gasping Joe Biden Disaster.
Democrats can rejoice in the fact that theres no
vaccine in sight. ###
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.
Okay City of Garnett, skateboarding is out, pickleball is in. Get rid of that mess of a skateboard
park at the north park and make it into pickleball. Thank you.
In response to Garnett being unfriendly, Ive
worked in retail for many years and have always
gotten and continue to get positive comments on
what a friendly town we are. Keep up the good
work.
Please replace the tattered flag at our Garnett
Post Office. What a disgrace to our great nation.
Let me get this straight. A candidate for the
Garnett City Commission said in an open meeting, and I quote, I dont think the legal prece-
Behavior of adults real threat to Kansas students
Testimony submitted last week to the
Special Committee on Education crystalized three unfortunate realities: (1) student
achievement is low and has been trending down for many years, with significant
achievement gaps for low-income students;
(2) achievement will remain persistently low
until adult behaviors change in the education
bureaucracy, and (3) most education officials
have no intention of changing their behavior.
Im not talking about teachers and others
who work in the trenches. This reality concerns officials at the Department of Education
(KSDE), the State Board of Education, the
Kansas Association of School Boards (KASB),
the teacher unions, many superintendents,
and other administrators. They claim to want
student achievement to improve but wont
change their behaviors to make it happen.
The hearings examined Kansass education
climate and its impact on student achievement.
Aside from Kansas Legislative Research, the
Division of Post Audit, and the Office of the
Revisor of Statutes, testimony generally fell
into two buckets. The bureaucracy attempted
to justify continuing the efforts that produced
low achievement and witnesses who proposed
changes to improve outcomes.
Bureaucrats tried to excuse away years of
bad results. For example, KASB proclaimed
Kansas is one of just six states that didnt
experience declines in ACT scores in 2022.
The reality is that the 2022 results were the
KANSAS COMMENTARY
DAVE TRABERT, KANSAS POLICY INSTITUTE
same as those from 2021, which were the worst
scores recorded in more than 30 years. Only
21% of Kansas graduates were college-ready
in English, Reading, Math, and Science.
KASB tried to pitch that as good news.
KSDE said the state assessment doesnt
identify students below grade level because
it only measures grade-level competencies.
Trying to say that students who perform
poorly on grade-level-appropriate reading and
math measures insults the intelligence of parents who trust their kids to public schools.
They acknowledge that about a third of
students have limited ability to perform at
grade level, which obviously means those
kids are not performing at grade level. But
KSDE doesnt like the below grade level
label because it sounds bad (which it is), so
it scrubbed grade level from the description
for the sake of appearance. Originally, Level 1
was clearly below grade level because Levels
2-4 were identified as at or above grade level.
Even the Kansas Supreme Court wrote,
Level one is students who are not performing
at grade level in the given subject.[i]
The Division of Post Audit recapped findings from its 2023 examination on the use
of at-risk funding that are about the same
as its 2019 audit school districts still are
not spending money on above and beyond
services as required by state law. The State
Board of Education took no action following
the 2019 audit, and KSDEs testimony made it
apparent that legal violations would continue.
School districts and the bureaucracy are
also ignoring the building needs assessment
law. It says, school boards shall conduct
annual assessments of each school to identify
barriers to students reaching proficiency and
the budgetary changes required to overcome
them. Evidence showing school districts have
failed to comply with the law each of the
last three years was given to the committee.
This included the fact that superintendents
will not allow board members to participate
in meetings with teachers and principals.
The records were obtained by Kansas Policy
Institute, owner of The Sentinel, via Open
Records requests.
Several organizations were asked to provide
SEE TRABERT ON PAGE 11
Democrat laughter fuses Gaetz in McCarthy ouster
Kevin McCarthy has become the first
House speaker to ever be successfully ousted
in a motion to vacate vote. One day, you can
tell your grandchildren you were alive to witness this completely pointless bit of history.
Rep. Matt Gaetzs (R-Fla.) self-aggrandizing
political stunt makes no sense and changes
nothing — other than perhaps his fundraising
totals. And other than some platitudinous
blathering about the establishment and
the uniparty, I still havent seen anyone
offer a coherent reason — not even retroactively — for how any of this is the best way to
advance the conservative agenda.
It would be one thing, perhaps an admirable thing, if Gaetz had gone on this crusade for
a coherent ideological or principled reason.
But his post-ousting demagoguery and grandstanding about issues completely unrelated to
McCarthys job performance proved it was a
personal matter.
I dont think voting against Kevin
McCarthy is chaos, Gaetz explained. I think
$33 trillion in debt is chaos. I think that facing
a $2.2-trillion annual deficit is chaos. Now,
there are numerous people to blame for the
impending fiscal disaster, but McCarthy is no
more guilty than most.
One of the least convincing claims by
Gaetzs defenders is that McCarthy was punished for ignoring the base. The base, of
course, is a popular euphemism for the most
vociferous populist faction of the GOP. This
faction enjoys blowing things up — mostly
their own partys prospects. In this case, the
base was represented by eight Republicans
and the entire Democratic Party.
And among these principled eight GOPers
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
DAVID HARSANYI, THE FEDERALIST
who were fighting for the honor of the base
— what The New York Times called the farright GOP faction — were Reps. Nancy Mace
(who said Gaetz was a fraud the last time he
tried to knock off McCarthy) and Ken Buck
(who we last heard was reportedly looking for
a CNN gig). Im going to go out on a limb and
say that the future of conservatism was not
the motivating factor for their votes.
Most Trump-endorsed candidates didnt
even participate in McCarthys removal.
Donald Trump himself tepidly supported the
speaker because, as he noted, the man had
said very great things about him. And,
really, whats more important? Though, I bet
McCarthy was expecting a far more energetic
defense after pathetically ingratiating himself
to the former president a couple of weeks ago.
Even if Gaetz had excellent reasons,
Republicans did not eject McCarthy. Eight
Republicans cant do anything by themselves.
No, 208 Democrats ousted McCarthy with the
help of some petulant backbenchers nursing
personal vendettas. It is a political coup for
the Dems.
Gaetz, who only yesterday was going
on about McCarthys secret deal with
Democrats, had no qualms sitting on the
opposition side of the House plotting to oust a
speaker who holds a rickety nine-seat majority. If there was actually a brewing House
rebellion, Gaetz would have been able to corral far more votes.
But Gaetz wanted to break the fever of
D.C., so he teamed up with minority leader
Hakeem Jeffries, the squad, Adam Schiff
and so on. Jeffries claimed he was supporting Gaetzs efforts because Republicans have
shown an unwillingness to break from
MAGA extremism in an authentic and comprehensive manner.
The notion that Democrats are backing a
leading MAGA loyalist because they want to
temper the extremism of Republicans makes
about as much sense as Jamaal Bowmans fire
alarm story. Democrats keep pretending they
yearn for a more responsible GOP and stable
political environment, then keep supporting
every fringe effort and candidate to undermine both.
Of course, no one is owed anything.
McCarthy isnt the only person available in
D.C. to serve as a middling speaker of the
House. And, frankly, if hed been more talented at the job, he might have headed off this
challenge more effectively. But its doubtful
anyone is going to perform better with a slender majority and the Senate and presidency in
Democrats hands.
But then again, none of that matters when
youre having a tantrum.
dent has any standing here. Id like to focus
strictly on what we took an oath to obey. So,
someone who wants to be a city commissioner
is willing to just throw the law aside to do
something that he thinks ought to be done.
Sounds like maybe he should be running for
president of Ukraine. Thank you.
To the Garnett Elementary School, Mr.
Ackland and staff, can we please please bring
back the south door after school so us parents
can pick our children up swiftly? Its become
a nightmare. Its slow going and theres a lot
of parents who use that south door especially
when we have shifts to get to for work and off
from work. We would greatly appreciate it if
you would bring back the south door to let the
children out at the end of the day. Thank you.
Cant believe Mark Powls is going to run for
commissioner. Warning, do not elect this guy
hes one of these extreme right-wing nuts that
believes the election was stolen. Hes a big
lover of Trump. Do not let this man be mayor
of Garnett.
Editors note: To the Crest school bond commenter, please make your comments more brief
or send us a signed Letter to the Editor at
review@garnett-ks.com.
A diary, for that matter any stolen property,
can be the FBIs business. And I do wish contributors would use a nonpartisan fact check
before posting. It would be quite apparent
then that Biden, despite the older videos,
is definitely not a sex offender. Perhaps its
confusion with Trump. He brags about his
offensive behavior.
The Democrat controlled FBI raids journalists offices and homes to find out their sources for revelations in Joe Bidens daughters
diary about his perverted behavior with her.
Something for which the FBI has no jurisdiction. On the other hand, there was no raid on
the far left New York Times to find out their
source for Trumps IRS tax returns illegally
leaked by a Democrat operative at the IRS
something very much in the purview of the
FBI.
Slimy, corrupt Democrat hack AG Merrick
Garland had the gall to deny Biden DOJ political bias. Then he condemns endangering the
safety of fascist Democrat Party prosecutors
and judges who abuse their public offices to
selectively persecute political opponents, but
said nothing when Democrat Schumer directly threatened Supreme Court Justices by
name and did nothing to enforce the law and
stop Democrat mobs from immediately targeting the private homes of those justices to
intimidate them and their families, even after
the Democrat activist assassination attempt
on Kavanaugh and his family.
Biden the global appeaser is at it again, lifting
sanctions on Iran and giving back the 6 billion
in support of terrorism. The blood in Israel is
on Biden and the Democrats who support his
evil policies. Would someone please explain
how one can be a professed Christian and
yet support the Biden Democratic agenda?
Thanks to Obama and now Biden, we have a
present day holocaust.
If you are a Democrat you are in a demonic
party that supports the sexual mutilation
of children including castration sterilization
and pumping them with drugs that cause
permanent damage to bones, heart and brain,
that supports elective abortion up to the
moment of birth which is clear infanticide,
that supports tax dollars used in the public
schools to attack traditional religious values
with graphic LGBTQ sexual indoctrination
of other peoples children and teaching white
children they should feel ashamed of their
skin color and their classmates to view them
as an oppressor. Clear child abuse and incitement to bullying and violence. Any wonder
that the suicide rate of white children is now
more than two times that of black children?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Day 1 – KAA Fall Field Event
EVENT…
amazed at the number of pawpaws that were along this
trail. It was too early for them
to be ripe.
FROM PAGE 1
Sept. 22, 2023
Day One at the KAA Fall
Field Event in the Crawford
County State Park. Up at
6:00 AM and enjoyed a nice
continental breakfast before
driving down to the park. At
8:00 we all gathered at a large
shelter house to check in and
receive our instructions for
the day.
Our leader for this event
was, Shelby Beltz, MA,
Kansas Public Archeologist.
There were 14 of us who
answered the roll call.
Shelby then divided us
into two teams. One team
was assigned to the 1930s CCC
and the other team to the Civil
War encampment. I was very
excited when I was chosen to
work at the old military camp
site. We had no more than
gotten our assignments,when
it started raining. At 9:00 AM,
Shelby announced we were
going to cancel out for the
morning and meet back at
1:00. We were all free to do or
go wherever. Several of us just
took naps in our vehicles.
The rain stopped right
at noon and after a quick in
the field sack lunch, we all
gathered once again. Since I
was assigned to the military
encampment, I will only write
about my assignment. We had
three metal detector operators
(I was one) and four diggers/
recorders plus Shelby, our
leader.
Our very first event was to
take a hike on the Spider Leg
Bridge Trail that completely encircled the area where
we would be working. I was
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
Once again we were split
up into two groups and began
conducting metal detector surveys around two of the stone
rock foundations that are still
visible.
In my area, we were soon
uncovering square nails, several pieces of what once was a
cast iron stove, harness buckles, log chain links and we
also collected shards of glass
bottles and dishware from the
surface. I hate to brag, but
I found the find of the afternoon, a perfect brass general
staff eagle button. Even the
wire shank was still in tact.
At 5:00 PM we gathered
up everything and went back
to our motels. After a shower,
I walked over to McDonalds
and grabbed a bite to eat
before retiring for the day.
My next weeks column will
be about day two of this adventurous project.
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers. 25Sept2023
14th, a rare solar eclipse will
grace our skies, casting what
organizers are describing as a
celestial light on the Lake
Garnett Grand Prix Revival. Be
sure to bring your solar eclipse
glasses (or welding helmets) for
safe viewing.
Expanded Car Show Classes:
Featuring 30 new show classes
and awards, the 2023 version of
the LGGPR car show is set to be
the largest yet. Organizers have
opened the doors to all types of
automotive passion, including
meticulously restored classics,
sizzling hot rods, custom cars
from every era, virtually all
thunderous performance cars
and trucks theres a spot for
every masterpiece.
Free Spectator Experience
Admission and parking are
free for spectators, making
the Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Revival a family-friendly event
for all ages.
Charity Rides for Spectators:
Purchase a ticket to ride around
the historic racetrack in one of
more than 40 incredible automobiles. There are no limits to
the number of tickets you can
purchase, and all proceeds go
to charity.
Charitable Contributions
The LGGPR has donated
over $47,000 to charities and
organizations, many of which
are in Garnett or around
Anderson County. This years
official charities are as follows:
Women In Need Gaining
Strength (WINGS): A Garnettbased organization dedicated to supporting women in
Anderson County who are battling breast cancer as well as
awareness and prevention of
the disease.
Geeks
for
Kids:
Organization of volunteers who
design and build special electric toy cars and other assistive
devices so that children with
mobility challenges can play
with others and explore their
environment on their own.
Flint Hills Technical
Automotive Training Center in
Garnett Get Involved:
Car Owners: If you own a
Corvette, Cobra, or any sports
or performance car, this is your
invitation to be part of this his-
toric celebration. Register now
and be a part of motorsport
history.
Spectators: Bring your family and friends to witness the
excitement, history, and beauty of these incredible automobiles. Admission and parking
are free.
Business Cards Car Magnets
Project Bid Forms More!
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Health Services
DIRECTORY
Dentistry
Family Care
Hospice
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
St. Rose fall trivia
fundraiser to be Nov. 4
St Rose School is having
their Fall Trivia on Saturday,
November 4th at 7 p.m.
5
HISTORY
Eye Care
(785) 448-6590
427 S. Oak
Garnett
Pharmacy
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
Call St Rose to reserve your
table of six at 785-448-3423.
Boutique vendors wanted
Holiday Boutique vendors
wanted for the annual BPW
Holiday Boutique on Sunday,
December 3 from noon to 4:00
p.m.
Businesses,
crafters,
demonstrations may show or
sell. The boutique will be held
in the Kirk House.
Contact Helen Norman at
(785) 448-8745 to secure your
booth. Booth fee is $25.
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
M-T-W-F
8-5
SAT 8-10
After Hours By Appt.
IN BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
TC Auto Repair
Parker, Ks
Specializing in:
Small engines ATV/UTV
equipment repair oil changes
Taylor Chapman (620) 600-3692
Denis Wiesner (620) 224-6107
Just 8 bucks a
block per week to
list your
business here!
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
LicensedElectricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
QualityServiceFor
Over 20 Years.
ServingAnderson
&FranklinCounties.
Always
Expect
The
Best!
WHOLESALE WASHER CO.
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
Matters
HOT & COLD HIGH
PRESSURE WASHERS
New & Reconditioned
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
(620) 583-2421 Eureka, Ks.
Hecks Moving Service
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Howard Yoder
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
(785) 489-2212
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Inspected Facility
Ashton Heck
(785) 204-0369
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
1-800-823-8609
Post Frame Construction
Residential Slab Homes
www.yutzyconstruction.com
6
LGGPR
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival
SCHEDULE
Friday, October 13th
10:30a – 3:00p Road Tour Meet @ The Garnett Town Square
4th And Oak
5:00p – 8:00p Registration / Check-In Open @ Fairgrounds
Community Center
6:00p Kickoff Dinner – @ Fairgrounds Community Center- BBQ
Dinner Inside The Community Center. If You Prefer The
Tailgate Style, You Are Welcome To Come In Grab Food And
Head Out To Your Tailgate Area.
Saturday, October 14th
7:00a Gates Open For Track Participants
7:00a – 9:30a Registration For Track Groups And Autocross @
The Rec Center
8:00a Track Goes HOT- No Entry For Track Participants After
8am – Gates Open For Spectators
8:15a Mandatory Drivers Meeting For All Saturday Groups – In
The Paddock
8:30a Group Sessions Start – (The Order Of The Heats Will Be
Announced At The Drivers Meeting)
-Approximately 20 Minute Sessions Session Times Will Start
When Group Rolls Off Grid And Include Cool Down Lap After
Checker. ONLY Cars From Saturday Groups Allowed In
The Paddock
– Group R (60 Mph – First Time Drivers, must be accompanied
by guardian or instructor)
– Group V (Vintage Race Cars)
– Group H (Historic – 50mph – Passengers Allowed)
– Group X (100 Mph – Now Open To Everyone)
– Group E (Modern Race Cars)
2:00p All Group E & V Cars Going To The Revival Showcase
Need To Be Staged On Grid For Parade Downtown.
9:00a – 1:00p EKAE Autocross @ The Garnett Airport
11:30a – 2:00p Registration For Car Show @ Garnett Town Square
12:00p – 5:00p Revival Showcase @ Town Square
2:00p – 5:00p Charity Rides – Open To The Public. Staging For The
Rides At Corner Of 4th And Oak Street
4:00p – 4:30p Awards Presentation (Location TBD)
5:00p – 9:00p Social Hour @ Downtown At The Square
Sunday, October 15th
7:00a Gates Open For Track Participants
7:00a – 8:00a Registration For Track Groups @ The Rec Center
8:00a Track Goes HOT- No Entry For Track Participants After
8am – Gates Open For Spectators
8:15a Mandatory Drivers Meeting For All Sunday Groups – On
The Grid
8:30a – 8:45a National Anthem And Flag Ceremony
9:00a Morning Group Sessions Start
-The Order Of The Heats Will Be Announced At The Drivers
Meeting. Approximately 20 Minute Sessions Session Times
Will Start When Group Rolls Off Grid And Include Cool Down
Lap After Checker. ONLY Cars From Sunday Groups Allowed
In The Paddock.
– Group A (60 Mph – Passengers Allowed)
– Group B1 (80 Mph – Cars Pre 1975)
– Group B2 (80 Mph – Cars Post 1975)
– Group C1 (100 Mph – Cars Pre 1975)
– Group C2 (100 Mph – Cars Post 1975)
– Group E (Modern Race Cars)
– Group H (Historic – 50mph)
12:30p – 12:50p Lunch Break
1:00p Afternoon Group Sessions Start – The Order Of The Heats
Will Be Announced At The Drivers Meeting. Approximately 20
Minute Sessions Session Times Will Start When Group Rolls
Off Grid And Include Cool Down Lap After Checker.
ONLY Cars From Sunday Groups Allowed In The Paddock
– Group V (Vintage Race Cars)
– Group A (60 Mph – Passengers Allowed)
– Group B1 (80 Mph – Cars Pre 1975)
– Group B2 (80 Mph – Cars Post 1975)
– Group E (Modern Race Cars)
– Group V (Vintage Race Cars)
History of Lake Garnett, race track and the Revival
The North Lake Park consists of approximately 300
acres and is located inside the
city limits of Garnett, Kansas.
The creation of the park started with the construction of
Lake Garnett which began on
October 15, 1934 by Civilian
Conservation Corps. The project included a 48 acre man
made lake with dam and spillway, a road, and the planting of over 300 cedar trees,
lilac bushes, rose bushes and
shrubs. Also encompassing the
project are two shelter houses,
restrooms, a football stadium
and swimming pool. The project was finished in 1936.
About the Track
The track is part of Garnetts
North Lake Park which is visited by thousands of people each
year who cruise the lake and
spend time enjoying the parks
unique history and variety of
amenities.
Lake Garnett race track
is a 2.8 mile road course that
was completely re-done in 2007
with new track surface, new
pit road, new off road, new corner curbing and an enlarged
asphalt hot pit area.
The park found stardom as
a national landmark in the late
50s to early 70s when the lake
road became the 2.8 mile true
road course for 9 sports car
races held from 1959 to 1972.
This was the premier series at
the time and included cars from
all of the major automakers
including Ferrari, Maserati,
Shelby, Chevrolet and Austin
Healey to name a few. Many
famous race car drivers, such
as Dan Gurney and Carroll
Shelby, raced here. Race fans
now in their 60s and 70s all
over the country still remember heading to Garnett those
weekends after the Fourth of
July to join an estimated 60,000
to 70,000 fans who sometimes
attended the events throughout the 1960s.
Due to difficulties with
crowd control and increasing
safety concerns the track was
closed to competitive racing
in 1972. The ghosts of races
past still lives on.
The Revival Begins
In 2013, out of personal
desire to hear cars screaming around the track, CB
Harris, his wife Cheryl, and
a small band of volunteers
hosted a tribute to the racers,
2×3 Celebrate
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vintage metal!
Collision
Complete
automotive inspections and computer-
Paola, Ks. (913) 2944016
2×4
GSSB
WERE PROUD TO CELEBRATE GARNETTS
RACING
TRADITION WITH THE LGGPR!
2×2 Benjamin
Thank you, drivers,
NE W
for all the memories.
2x3Check Out Our
Daily Specials!
Tradewinds
Friendly Service
Down-home Cooking
Great Atmosphere
Check us out
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Well see you
at the
601 South Oak, Garnett 785-448-3212
2×2
D&M Mini Barn
Watch Garnett racing
history come alive at the
Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival!
(785) 504-9625
24751 N Highway 169, Garnett
www.dmminibarns.com
Realty
Well see you at the Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival this weekend!
2×2
Yutzy
2×2 us for your next set of tires!
Remember
Wolken
2×5
State
Farm
For more information click:
www.midwest-collision.com
2×4
EKAE
Enjoy the Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival!
The Chute, Clubhouse Bend, to
name a few.
Charity Rides
During
the
Revival
Showcase on Saturday spectators will have the rare opportunity to take a ride in a classic car for a couple of parade
laps around the historic track.
There will be a number of different cars to choose from.
Due to the popularity of this
event it may be difficult to get
to ride in your first choice, it
might be your second. Keep
in mind that its all volunteer
and all the proceeds will be
donated to local charities. The
Charity Rides will take place
on Saturday. Staging will be
downtown on the corner of 4th
and Oak Street from 2 p.m. – 5
p.m.
ized estimates to repair dents, crushed doors, broken
lights and windows and more.
Welcome to the Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival!
Ethanol – Fueling A New Generation
cars and events of past. This
event was a huge success, so
much so that the participants
and the city requested that the
event become an annual event.
This was the birth of the Lake
Garnett Grand Prix Revival.
The event is now organized
and arranged by a committee made up of local car clubs
and individuals. The City of
Garnett has sanctioned and
supports the event.
Cruising Lake Garnett is a
favorite past-time or custom
of both the local residents and
visitors. When cruising Lake
Garnett one must be mindful
of its unique features which
were fondly named by the Lake
Garnett Racing Association:
Flat Iron Corner, North Bend,
Muleshoe Corner, Red Dog
Straight Away, Snyder Corner,
LGGPR
www.yutzyconstruction.com
1-800-823-8609
Welcome LGGPR
2×3
Patriots
drivers & fans!
Bank
LAKE OZARK, MO.
GARNETT
GARDNER
PRINCETON
OTTAWA
1196 HORSESHOE
113 S. Maple
1506 S. MAIN BEND PARKWAY
104 E. Main
1508 Hwy. 59
(785) 448-5138 (913) 856-8809 (785) 937-2260 (785) 521-3991 (417) 943-2265
www.patriotsbank.com
Have
2×2
fun
QSI
at the
LGGPR!
785-448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave Garnett
2×3
4th Street
Flea Market
n
Come i se!
& brow
121 E. 4th Street, Garnett, Ks.
(785) 418-1060 (785) 418-1508
Open Tues-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Closed Sun. & Mon.
A fast trip down memory road…
Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival
Dodds Memorials
335 W. Main
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-3350
community
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
CALENDAR
Tuesday, October 10, 2023
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
1:30 p.m. – Ministerial Alliance
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
10:00 a.m. – Remember When
Wednesday
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
4:30 p.m. – Tourism Advisory Board
Meeting
7:00 p.m. – VFW Auxiliary Meeting
7:00 p.m. – VFW Post 6397 Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Friends of the PSRT
Meeting
Thursday, October 12, 2023
8:00 a.m. – Morning Mingle
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44 Meeting
Friday, October 13, 2023
8:00 a.m. – 10th Annual Lake
Garnett Grand Prix Revival
4:00 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board
Meeting
Saturday, October 14, 2023
8:00 a.m. – 10th Annual Lake
Garnett Grand Prix Revival
Sunday, October 15, 2023
8:00 a.m. – 10th Annual Lake
Garnett Grand Prix Reviva
9:00 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
Monday, October 16, 2023
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
Meeting
Tuesday, October 17, 2023
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:00 p.m. – Anderson County
Economic Development Meeting
5:30 p.m. – BPW Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – Planning Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 18, 2023
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, October 19, 2023
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committee
Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Monday, October 23, 2023
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
Tuesday, October 24, 2023
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – City Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 25, 2023
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, October 26, 2023
2:00 p.m. – Emergency Food
Assistance Program. (Harvesters)
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Political forum to be Oct. 19
The sign is up and
the candidates have
been contacted. On
October 19th at 7 p.m.,
Garnett BPW along
with the Anderson
County
Farm
Bureau are hosting
a political forum.
Commissioners and
the school board candidates have been
invited to the forum,
which is open to the
public.
Please plan to
attend
and
get
answers to your questions to be prepared
to vote on Tuesday,
November 7th.
Also of note, the
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2023 / SUBMITTED
late day to register to
Hank Newton (far left) Cherry Mound 4-H Club President and 4-H Council Secretary, and Jeanette
vote is October 17th.
Stinebaugh (far right) attended the Anderson County Commissioners Meeting Monday, Oct. 2. The
The general election will be
Commissioners read and signed a proclamation declaring October 1-7, 2023 as National 4-H Week in
November 17th and the first
Anderson County.
day to vote early in the Clerks
office will be October 23rd.
Pieces & Patches Quilt Guild minutes for September
The Pieces and Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
President Connie Hatch on
Thursday, September 28th,
2023, at 9:30 a.m. The meeting
was held at the Kansas State
Extension Office Conference
Room. There were 25 members
in attendance. There was one
guest, Janet Truelove.
There was one correction to
the Minutes of the August 24th,
2023 meeting to reflect that the
cowboy in Judy Stukeys quilt
was an appliqued cowboy not a
panel. The corrected minutes
were then approved.
President Connie Hatch
congratulated Sharon Rich on
her blue ribbon quilt from the
Kansas State Fair. The quilt
is a T-shirt quilt with all of the
Wolf Creek Outage t-shirts for 70
years, 35 on the front and 35 on
the back, with 48 outage patches
used as cornerstones. She made
the Quilt for Jennifer Burke.
Sharon will display the quilt at
Wolf Creek before giving it to
Jennifer.
Helen Norman gave the treasurers report which was then
approved.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
Programs:
Chairman
Jeanette Gadelman reported
that todays program will be
given by Holly Minor on the
Care of Quilts. Jeanette will
give the October program All
About Precuts. Phyllis Stuart
will give the November program
on Doll Quilts.
Quilters Hugs: Lori Hoyt
took 2 quilts to a Nursing Home
in Burlington.
Opportunity Quilt: The 2024
quilt will be quilted by January.
Members will begin hand quilting the 2025 quilt on October 4.
Member Morale: Brenda
Futrell and Lori Hoyt sent out
birthday cards to members.
BOM: Sharon Rich presented two tablerunner patterns for
September and October. One is
called Ribbons and the second
is called Leftover Biscuits.
Members are asked to bring
completed tablerunners for
Show and Tell at the November
meeting
Challenge: Members are
asked to bring their completed
Signature Block project to the
November meeting.
AN County Fair:
Bonnie
Deiter made a the motion to purchase two sets of 3 quilt rack
panels which had never been
used for the County Fair. Lynn
Wawrzewski seconded. The
motion passsed.
Old Business: Terrie Gifford
reminded members that we had
agreed to display Christmas
quilts November through
December at the library. She
got a show of hands of those who
would be bringing items and it
looks like we should have a good
showing. Bring your items to
give to Jeanette at the October
meeting.
New Business: There was no
new business.
Secret Sister Gifts: Sharon
Rich thanked her secret sister
for the gift certificate to Silver
Threads & Golden Needles. Lou
Ann Shmidl received a fabric
pumpkin, banana bread, a gift
certificate and a bottle of liquid avocado soap. Clara Ann
Kempnich received a 3 yard
bundle of fabrics and a 3-yard
quilt pattern book.
Show and Tell: Sharon Rich
showed her blue ribbon winning
Wolf Creek T-Shirt quilt and the
quilted jacket she was wearing
that she learned to make at a
class she took in Overbrook.
Bun Miller showed a tablerunner from a pattern called
Shortcake by Cluck, Cluck
Sew. Jeanette did the quilting.
Sandra Moffatt showed her completed 2021 Block of the Month
designed by Sherry McConnell
that was on Quilters Life Blog.
Jeanette did the quilting. Joyce
Buckley showed two Bargello
quilts each with 35 colors and as
usual she modified the pattern
to make them each different. She
devised a strip piecing method
that made the construction a little less difficult. Jeanette did the
quilting. Donna Sutton showed
her quilt top based on a pattern
she saw on the internet called
Jungle. She completed it at the
recent retreat. She also showed
a Beauty & the Beast baby
quilt. Eileen Browning showed
a Halloween Wall Hanging
and Halloween pillows and a
Jacket she made for her mother
at a class on applique at the
Country Sampler in Nebraska.
Carolyn Crupper showed an
I Spy themed Quilters Hug
quilt. Mary Parrott showed 3
quilt tops made with different
configurations of 4 patches, a
Sands of Time quilt in primary colors and a sample of some of
her 24 log cabin blocks made in
Reds, Whites and Blues. Jackie
Gardner showed three fabric
pumpkins. Shirley Allen showed
a Quilters Hug quilt made with
leftover blocks from Barb Merry.
Brenda Futrell showed another of her Chuckwagon quilts
with a panel called Trails End.
Her Chuckwagon quilts are for
relatives who participated for
years in a family Chuckwagon
Cook Off in New Mexico. Clara
Ann Kempnich showed her
beautiful pink butterfly quilt.
Lynn Wawrzewski showed
her blue quilt called Alaska
from Laundry Basket Quilts,
her completed purple Triple
Feathered star quilt, a Shooting
Stars Quilt by Edyta Sitar with
3-dimensional stars that she
won Grand Champion with at
Garnett Lions Club
Chili/Soup Supper
2×4
Tuesday October 17, 2023
Lions
GarnettClub
First Christian Church
For tickets call your favorite Lion or scan the code below.
Scan this code &
buy direct, right now!
GREELEY Mon., Oct. 16th, from 7:30 a.m.- 8:30 a.m. at Greeley Berea
Community Hall, 110 Broadway Ave., in Greeley.
GARNETT Tues., Oct. 17, from 7:30 a.m-5:00 p.m. (closed 12-12:30 for
lunch), Anderson County Health Department, 301 S. Vine, in Garnett.
Accepted insurances: Blue Cross Blue Shield, KanCare, Cigna, United Healthcare,
Humana, Aetna, Medicare Part B, Coventry, Medicaid. No insurance? Cash price $50
for 65 and under; $95 for 65 and over. For questions call 785-448-6559.
KANSAS STATEWIDE
ADVERTISING
785-448-3121 / FAX 785-448-6253
email: review@garnett-ks.com
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.
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
SAINT LUKES HEALTH SYSTEM
The meeting was adjourned.
Minutes recorded by Terrie
Gifford
11:30-1:30, 4:30-7
Adults $10 Kids under 10 $6 Carry out $11
3x3SEK
SEK
Mental Health
HealthDepartment
Multi-County
Anderson County
Hospital
the Anderson County Fair and
her Laundry Basket quilt she
calls her Witness Quilt with
embroidered words Faith,
Hope, Love, Grace, Joy, Peace.
Lynda Feuerborn showed a strip
quilt she made from a Jelly Roll
in fall colors. Jeanette quilted it.
Terrie Gifford showed a scrappy Red, White and Blue quilt
for Quilts of Valor with matching pillow case and a set of carthemed placemats for a great
nephew. Connie Hatch showed
a queen size Christmas quilt
which was quilted by Laura
Peterson.
Holly Minor gave a program
on Care of Quilts where we
learned about many things that
can damage quilts, how to store
them when not in use, a history of
quilts and materials with which
they were made. She showed
some antique family quilts and
some of her own quilts. She has
done a lot of research on the
topic through online research
and at the International Quilt
Museum in Omaha, Nebraska.
WOLKEN
TIRE
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak Garnett
(785) 448-3212
The most
reliable
overnight
shipping
service.
118 E. 5th, on the square, Garnett
(785) 448-3841
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Available at Garnett Publishing, 112 W. Sixth, Garnett
AT THE INTERSECTION OF
Hwy. 31 (Park Rd.) & Hwy. 59 in Garnett
785-448-2121
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
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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
8
CLASSIFIEDS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Notice to creditors – Bowman Estate Notice to creditors – McNabb Estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, October 3, 2023)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
EVERETT SAMUEL BOWMAN, a/k/a,
EVERETT BOWMAN, Deceased.
Case #AN-2023-PR-000022
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i) four months from
the date of the first publication of this notice as
provided by law or (ii) thirty days after actual
notice was given as provided by law to those
creditors whose identity is known or reasonably
ascertainable; and if their demands are not thus
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 26, 2023)
exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
TIMOTHY SCOTT BOWMAN
Executor
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Executord
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
LARRY WAYNE MCNABB, Deceased.
Case #AN-2023-PR-000012
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
oc3t3*
CONCERNED:
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i) four months from
the date of the first publication of this notice as
provided by law or (ii) thirty days after actual
notice was given as provided by law to those
creditors whose identity is known or reasonably
ascertainable; and if their demands are not
thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
DON L. MCNABB
Administrator
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Administrator
sp26t3*
Notice
to
creditors
Martin
Estate
Notice of hearing – Beachy Estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, October 3, 2023)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
RALPH BEACHY, Deceased.
Case #AN-2023-PR-000025
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in this court by Dora Beth Mersman,
designated agent of all of the heirs at law of
Ralph Beachy, deceased, praying that descent
of the decedent be determined and that title to
certain real estate situated in Anderson County,
Kansas, particularly described in said petition,
and all other Kansas real estate and all personal property wheresoever situated, if any, as was
or may have been owned by said decedent at
the time of death, be assigned pursuant to the
terms of a certain family settlement agreement
filed with the said petition, subject to any lawful
disposition thereof heretofore made.
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before the 25th day of October,
2023, at 9:00 a.m. in the District Court, Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, October 3, 2023)
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the petition.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
DORA BETH MERSMAN
Petitioner
In the Matter of the Estate of
NICOLE LYNN MARTIN, Deceased.
Case #AN-2023-PR-000023
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Executord
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE ESTATE OF COLLEEN J. BALL,
DECEASED
Petition filed on September 18th, 2023, in the
Anderson County, KS District Court requesting
letters of testamentary and to appoint Dana
Kay Outler Personal Representative of Colleen
J. Ball Estate.
Notice to creditors of the decedent to exhibit
their demands against the estate within four
months from the date of the first published
notice as provided by law and that, if their
demands are not thus exhibited, they shall be
forever barred against the Estate of Colleen J.
Ball (also known as Colleen J. Kilbourn and
Colleen J. Morgan). Formerly of Anderson
County, KS city of Garnett who died July 22nd,
2023. The undersigned will proceed to distribute the assets of the said Deceased amongst
the persons entitled therto, having regard only
to the claims, debts and demands of Colleen
J. Ball Estate.
(Published in the Anderson County Review,
October 10, 2023.)
ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATON
File Claims with
Anderson County Courthouse
100 E 4th Ave., PO Box 305
Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: 785-448-6886 Fax: 785-448-3230
Clerk of the District Court: Carla Skiles
1) Publication title: The Anderson County
Review; 2) Publication number: 214200; 3)
Filing Date 10/5/2023; 4) Issue frequency:
Weekly; 5) Number of issues annually: 52;
6) Annual subscription price: $45.84+ tax;
7) Contact person: Dane Hicks; Telephone:
(785) 448-3121; Mailing Address: 112 W. 6th,
Garnett, Ks., 66032; 8) General business
office headquarters mailing address: same;
9) Publisher: Garold Dane Hicks, 27651 NE
2000 Rd, Greeley, Ks., 66033; Editor: same;
Managing editor: same; 10) Owner: Garnett
Publishing, Inc., Garold Dane Hicks, Barbara
Kay Hicks; same addresses as above; 11)
Bondholders, mortgagees, security holders:
none; 12) Tax status: NA; 13) Publication title:
Dana Kay Outler
619 S. Webster St.
Spring Hill, KS 66083
oc10t3*
Notice to creditors – Peterson Estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, October 3, 2023)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
CARROLL L. PETERSON, Deceased.
Case #AN-2023-PR-000024
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i) four months from
the date of the first publication of this notice as
provided by law or (ii) thirty days after actual
notice was given as provided by law to those
creditors whose identity is known or reasonably
ascertainable; and if their demands are not thus
exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
in project management
WRITE-INS… ters
from George Washington
FROM PAGE 1
sion their daughter plays on
the golf team my wife coaches
and theyre a great family,
Wiehl said, but I dont see
eye to eye policy wise with
what Jasons been doing certainly not his tactics.
Wiehl, 42, is a Hutchinson
native who moved to Garnett
after his graduation from
the University of Kansas
School of Pharmacy to work
for AuBurn Pharmacies. He
and his wife Nicole have two
children. Wiehl said if elected
he plans to put a priority on
infrastructure maintenance
and finding non-property tax
revenues to help fund the city.
What I understand is
that were funding too many
things out of the utility budget, Wiehl said. We need
revenues other than property taxes, and we need to do
things to make Garnett more
appealing to attract families
so we can expand our tax
base.
Scott is an East Coast
native and a veteran of the Air
Force, Coast Guard and Army
Reserves and currently works
as a project manager in data
conversions. She has a mas-
University, an MBA in
accounting from Western
New England University and
a BA in Sociology concentrating in data analysis from the
University of Massachusetts.
A 31-year Garnett resident,
Scott says her basis in the
community makes her a valuable contender.
I am running for Garnett
City Commission because I
think we need to elect commissioners who have taken
the time to learn about our
city and its challenges and
are prepared to hit the ground
running if elected, she said.
Scott has coordinated the
Growing Garnett Community
Heart and Soul project since
2020 a research and analysis
effort she founded aiming to
discover residents priorities
and implementing related
policy. Shes attended numerous community planning
and development workshops
and frequently photographs
community activities for
Facebook pages related to the
Growing Garnett organization.
The winner of the
November city commission
race takes office in January
2024 to serve a three-year
term.
2×3 kpa morton
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i) four months from
the date of the first publication of this notice as
provided by law or (ii) thirty days after actual
notice was given as provided by law to those
creditors whose identity is known or reasonably
ascertainable; and if their demands are not thus
exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
FRANK J. MARTIN and
JOYCE E. MARTIN
Co-Administrators
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Executord
Statement of ownership
oc3t3*
Notice to creditors – Ball Estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, October 10, 2023.)
CONCERNED:
JANE LEDELL
MARY JOSEPHINE PILLLOW
Co-Executors
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Executord
oc3t3*
The Anderson County Review; 14) Issue date
for circulation data: 10/03/2023; 15) Extent and
nature of circulation: a.) Total number of copies
(net press run): 2,000; b.) Paid circulation: 1)
Mailed outside county paid subscriptions on ps
form 3541: Ave: 340, nearest filing date: 340; 2)
Mailed in-county paid subscriptions on ps 3541:
Ave: 777, nearest filing date: 777; 3) Paid distribution outside the mail including sales through
dealers, carriers, street vendors, counter sales
and other paid distribution outside the USPS:
Ave: 550, nearest publication date: 550; 4)
Paid distribution by other classes of mail: none;
c.) Total paid distribution: Ave: 1,667, nearest
publication date: 1,667; d.) Free or nominal
rate distribution (by mail and outside the mail);
1) Free or nominal rate outside county copies:
Ave: 15, nearest publication date 15; 2) Free
or nominal rate in-county copies included on
ps 3541: Ave: 30, nearest publication date: 30;
oc3t3*
3) Fee or nominal rate copies mailed at other
classes through the USPS: none; 4) Free or
nominal rate distribution outside the mail: Ave:
80, nearest publication date: 80; e.) Total free
or nominal rate distribution: Ave: 125, nearest publication date: 125; f.) Total distribution:
Ave: 1,792 nearest publication date: 1,792;
g.) Copies not distributed: Ave: 208, nearest
publication date: 208; h.) Total: Ave: 2,000,
nearest publication date: 2,000; i.) Percent
paid: Ave: 93%, nearest publication date: 93%;
16) Paid electronic copies: 0; b) Total Paid print
copies: 1,667, nearest publication date: 1,667;
c) Total print distribution: 1,792, nearest publication date: 1,792; d) Percent paid: 93, nearest
publication date: 93; Statement to be printed in
publication of 10/10/23.
17) /s/ Garold Dane Hicks, 10/03/23
oc11t1*
BENTON CURRY
WOOD SANDZEN
2×2 kpa soulis
We dont rent pigs.
Gallery Auction of
Paintings and Prints
But we do all kinds
of printing.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Saturday, October 14th
Lone Jack, Missouri
816.697.3830 | SoulisAuctions.com
PUBLIC AUCTION
1664 S. Maple St., Garnett, Ks.
(Or Google TLC Auto Salvage.)
Saturday, October 14th @ 9:30 a.m.
GUNS
High Standard Dbl. 9 22 cal.
H&R 923 22 cal.
Llama Semi Auto 22 cal.
Winchester 9422 XTR 22 cal. lever action
Browning 22 cal. Lever action
Winchester 30-30 model 94 lever action
Winchester 22 cal. Model 90 lever action
Winchester Model 12 12 ga. Pump, modified
Winchester Model 1897 12 ga. Pump, full
Winchester Model 1300 20 ga. Pump
FURNITURE
Solid Oak china hutch
Oak dining table & 6 padded chairs
Several nice wing back padded armchairs
Antique 14 sawn oak bow front dresser w/ harp mounted
mirror
Oak round display cabinet , 4 sided curved glass w/ glass
shelves, 5Tx 24 Diameter
Oak lighted display cabinet w/ glass shelves, 5x21W
Antique Superior oak display cabinet, wood shelves, curved
glass front & sides, 64Tx 43W,
Rockford,Illinois
Antique hand crafted wood frame mirror w/ etched mirror
Glass top coffee table
Antique ornate oak side table w/ ceramic casters
Antique oak childs rocker
Oak night stand
Several Four-drawer metal file cabinet
Huntley mid century Walnut bedroom suite, dresser, chest of
drawers, full size bed
Antique Walnut small Rocker
Singer sewing machine in Walnut cabinet
Vintage oak doll cradle
Antique oak padded rocker
Antique Set of 6 Oak Murphy dining chairs
Antique oak hall tree w/ umbrella stand base, Mission style
Antique oak clock shelf
Antique painted Chest of Drawers
Mid Century 3 drawer 2 door cabinet
Wood painted storage cabinet, 5Tx 21W
Oak writing table
Cedar lined oak chest
Antique oak ice box, refurbished, very nice
Vintage Oak triangular side table
Walnut armoire
Williams Blonde Oak dresser & chair, 1958
Antique Oak Harvester table with drawer
Antique Oak library table with drawer
Antique Walnut wood table with drawers
Vintage Oak mirrored dressing table
Antique Oak Writing table with drawer
Several oak plant stands
Several solid wood shelves/bookcases
Antique Enterprise Oak Ice Box
Large Oak display case, glass top, sliding oak doors
Metal Bakers Rack
Vintage metal rolling kitchen cart
Jack Daniels wood stave barrel, 50 gal.
10 gal. Wood Stave barrel
Twin size metal frame bed, vintage
Several vintage floor to ceiling lamps
HOUSEHOLD
Ironing Board & iron
Small wood sewing stand
Metal bread box
Sunbeam toaster
Hamilton Beach toaster
Later elec. can opener
Keystone meat grinder
Gem meat grinder
Sango Rambler Rose china set
Mount Clemens 1930s Mildred center floral china set
Corningware
Alum. Stock pot
Mid Century Juice set
Wagner cast iron skillet, 24x 10.5, #1140
Wagner cast-iron Drip Drop Baster, #8
Copper bowls, and spittoon
Metal & alum. Measuring cups
Some Guardian Service cookware
Union stoneware crock, #6
1 gal. Browntop stoneware jug
2 gal. Brown top stoneware jug
Crock bowl
Antique all wood washboard
Enamel teapot, chamber pot, bucket
Enamel bowls, some with handles
Antique canning jars, blue and green
Round galvanized tub
Number of wood liquor boxes
Glass top display case
Old tin flue cover
Number of old wood thread spools
Skirt marker
Wood Coca Cola box
Vintage toy Wolverine tin kitchen appliances
1959, 60,61 & 62 Garnett High School yearbooks
1963,64,65 & 66 Jayhawker magazine Yearbooks
Childrens books, some Louis LAmour westerns
L C Smith & Corona typewriter, 14
Kellogg wood wall phone
Several 1960s Blue Mound calendars
Pepsi Cola mounted bottle opener
Small safe, open, but no combination
Tinkertoys, in box, like new
1966 Budweiser calendar
Several sets Halls Plaza Sterling Silver flatware
Vintage Christmas Decor, Sebastian
Numerous wood Christmas Nutcrackers
Antique Dough Trough, 36Lx 15W
Vintage folding wood crate
Lots of very nice Ruby Red glassware
L. E. Smith Moon & Stars open Compote
Fenton pink compote, some Depression glass
Metal advertising posters
Several vintage dolls, Sayco Baby, Uneeda Doll, Ceramic,
Strawberry Shortcake, Poco
Porcelain, Roberta Doll
Doll clothes
Vintage Board Games
Lots of collectible glassware, Luminaric, Goebel, Godinger,
Toscany
Numerous vintage oil lamps
Number of very nice hand stitched quilts
Some needlework, doilies, etc.
Pitcher & Bowl set
Several brown stoneware crocks
The Rich Pump & Ladder Co. washboard
Christmas Nutcrackers
Some local advertisement items
Number of wood liquor boxes
Heroes Return WWII Era British UK War Department
catering pail
Several old metal feed scoops
Old Wire rug beater
Plee-zing Loaf Cheese wood box
APPLIANCES
Kenmore washer & NG dryer
Kenmore refrigerator, top freezer
GARAGE
4 HEVI TRED Step ladder
Bailey No. 7 wood plane
Several old wood box planes
Home 204 bench vise
Richards & Conover wood level
Craftsman miter box
Craftsman bench grinder on stand
Metal ammo box
1945 German fighting knife
Old wood toolbox
Framing, square
Champion child sled
Two and one man cross cut saws
Oil cans
PowrArm model M-2 bench vise
Shovels, rakes, bow saw, Buck saw, Hay knife
Several old padlocks w/ keys
Various hammers
Galvanized washtub on stand
Galvanized White No. 166 mop bucket
Several Steel implement wheels
Several wood barrel planters
Wood wheelbarrow
Set of Crockett spurs
Butler Mfg. Galvanized 5 gal. Measuring bucket
MEMORABILIA & PICTURES
Coors Millennium Stein, NIB
Coors The Rocky Mountain Legend steins
Coors Somewhere Near Golden, Co. steins
Coors 1996 Fly Fishing stein
Miller Brewing Co. Steins
Miller Genuine Draft Terry Redlin Ducks Unlimited Steins
Hoffman Distilling Co. wildlife decanters, NIB
Budweiser 40th Anniversary steins
Budweiser Holiday Stein collection
Richard Sloan ducks and geese prints
Several Gordon Snidow Coors Cowboy prints, framed
& matted
Tom Ryan Split Decision print, framed
Charles M. Russell The Musselshell Roundup print
Gary Hawk 1980 The Preconditioning Cattleman
print, 338/550
Frederic Remington print, framed and matted
Charles Russell Bronc to Breakfast print, framed and
matted
Several KC Royals 2015 World Series celebration prints,
framed and matted
KU Jayhawks 1988, 2008, 2022 prints & mirrors
Piece of flooring from Allen Fieldhouse, signed by Roy
Williams
Hamms, 3 Pabst Blue Ribbon, Miller High Life, and Schlitz
Beer mirrors
Miller Lite, and Tank 7 neon signs, working
Jim Beam train set, locomotive, baggage car, passenger car,
log car, dining car, box car, tank car, and yellow caboose
Lots of liquor memorabilia, metal signs & decanters
Lots of KU memorabilia, pennants, etc.
Several Old Lake Garnett Grand Prix pennants
LOTS OF NICE, RARELY SEEN ANTIQUES.
Owner: Pat & Carol Askins Beller Estate Auction
Nothing removed from premises until paid for. Cash, check and now accepting credit & debit cards w/ 3% per transaction fee.
Auction Company not responsible for theft, accident or loss
Statements made day of auction take precedence over printed details Pictures and sale bill on KansasAuctions.net
YODER AUCTION SERVICE
Auctioneers: Ben Yoder (785) 448-4419 Jr. Miller (620) 200-3007 James Yoder (620) 228-3548 Laverne Yoder (785) 204-2700
Ringman: Lavern Keim Clerk: Beth Rockers Cashiers: Karyn Yoder & Emily Keim
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
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CLASSIFIEDS
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Its EASY to place
your ad! it (785)
448-3121 (800) 683-4505it admin@garnett-ks.com it
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Advertising Rates
Classified Rates:
Up to 20 Words …………………….$6.00
Each addtl word……………………..55
(Commercial) …………………………65
Class Display……………..$9.54/clm.in.
Run Of Press Rates:
Standard ROP ……………$8.72/clm.in.
Color……………………………………..$65
Pre-print inserts ……………….$158.40
Front Page
Masthead Banner (w/color) ……$300
Bottom Page (w/color)…………..$100
Statewide/multi-state ………… Quote
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classified Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL:
admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
REAL ESTATE
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
Call
(785) 448-3999
1x1property
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
source
Chris Cygan
785-418-5435
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
HELP WANTED
FORKLIFT OPERATOR
Looking for an experienced individual who can operate a forklift
in outdoor conditions. Position
will be responsible for loading
outgoing trucks in all weather.
Job requirements include being able to run forklift, be able
to complete loading trucks in
a timely manner, communicating effectively and completing
paperwork.
Additional tasks
include keeping truss lay down
yard organized and ability to
drive a semi in yard. Starting pay
is based on ability, experience,
and references. This position is
40 plus hours a week, overtime
likely. Reliability is a MUST. Apply in person at Wheeler Lumber, 1959 Old HWY 50, Waverly.
Questions can be answered in
person or via phone at
785-733-2848.
OFFICE ASSSITANT
Wheeler Lumber in Waverly KS
has an immediate opening for
an Office Assistant. Duties will
include but is not limited to answering calls, filing, and learning
job specific software. This position requires basic experience in
an office setting and will require
excellent math skills. You will be
expected to proficient in the Microsoft Suite of programs, especially Word and Excel. Exact duties (and pay) will evolve based
on your abilities. We are a small
but growing office & are looking for a self-starter who is able
follow directions are can learn
quickly. You can expect to cross
train on a variety of tasks to provide coverage for others when
needed. This position would ideally be three-quarter to full time
Hours have some flexibility but
will be between the hours of 8-5.
Pay will be based on experience.
Vacation and Benefits are available. Bi-Lingual (Spanish) a plus
but not required. Apply in person at 1959 Old HWY 50, Waverly
or contact us at 785-733-2848 for
more information.
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
FARM & AG
Jazzy Chair – electric wheel
chair for sale. Please text (785)
304-2302.
oc3tfc
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
Association @ 785-271-5304 tod
ay!
Free Family-Friendly Fun!
Kids World Records is looking for participants in Kansas
between the ages of 4-16. Learn
more at www.kidsworldrecords.com
Bathroom Renovations. Easy,
one day updates! We specialize
in safe bathing. Beautiful walk
in showers with no slip flooring. Also, grab bars and seated
showers available. Waiving
All Installation Costs, Plus No
Interest and No Payments for 1
Year: 855-382-1221
Viagra and Cialis Users!
50 Pills Special $99.00 Free
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call Now! 844-887-7963
Professional
Lawn
Service: Fertilization, weed
control, seeding, aeration and
mosquito control. Call now for
a free quote. Ask about our
first application special! 855288-8649.
Looking for beautiful, energy efficient new windows for
your home? Call now and set
up your free, no-obligation
estimate. Beautify your home
today! 855-727-0043.
Top Ca$h paid for old guitars! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin,
Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone,
Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker,
Prairie State, DAngelico,
Stromberg.
And
Gibson
Mandolins / Banjos. 855-4546658
Paying top Ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Got an unwanted car???
Donate it to Patriotic Hearts.
Fast free pick up. All 50 States.
Patriotic Hearts programs
help veterans find work or
start their own business. Call
24/7: 855-612-3543.
Shop w/ A Viasat Expert For
High Speed Satellite Internet.
New Customer Deals In Your
Area. Nationwide Service. New
Service For 2023. 833-399-3117
HughesNet – Finally, superfast internet no matter where
you live. 25 Mbps just $59.99/
mo! Unlimited Data is Here.
Stream Video. Bundle TV &
Internet. Free Installation. Call
855-980-3374
Bath & Shower Updates in
as little as one day! Affordable
prices – No payments for 18
months! Lifetime warranty &
professional installs. Senior
& Military Discounts available. Call: 855-219-8849
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
2×4 kpa dcf
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
FREE FREE FREE
Monthly Specials
European
Deer Mounts
Max
Worthington
Garnett, Ks
(785) 448-8936
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
Happiness is… Benefit supper for Mahlon Keim. Mont
Ida Church, October 21, 2023,
Saturday from 3pm to 8pm.
Haystacks (AKA taco salad)
assorted homemade desserts.
Coffee, tea, water. Free will
offering. All proceeds will go
towards Mahlons medical
bills. oc10t2*
Happiness is… Community
Breakfast, Saturday, October
14, 7am-9am, Lane Community
Building. Pancakes, Biscuits
& Gravy, French Toast,
Scrambled Eggs and Sausage
Patties. Proceeds go for
Community Service. Sponsored
by Pottawatomie Township
Ruritan.
oc3t2*
FREE
2×2
BUY 3,kpa
GET 1 ginONgerich
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Up t
$50 o
0
BON
US!*
NOW HIRING SEASONAL HELP!
Need extra cash for the Holiday?
Focus Workforce Management is
currently seeking seasonal
pickers/ packers/ warehouse
associates for a large distribution
center in Ottawa, KS!
Pay up to
19/
$
hr
Anderson County Clerks Office- Clerk II
Candidates will perform general laborer duties including: abrasive blasting,
painting, unloading pipe, stock piling, grinding, operating overhead cranes, winch
trucks and hoisting equipment, installing pipe protectors for shipping.
Wedding, birth, engagement announcements published.
Contact the Review at review@garnett-ks.com
Happiness is… The Garnett
Lions Club Soup & Chili
Supper, Oct. 17, 11-1 and 4:30-7
at the Garnett First Christian
Church. Adults $10, Kids $6,
Carryout $11. Get tickets from
any member or scan the ad in
todays paper to buy online.
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Under the supervision of the County Clerk, the Clerk
clerk
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records in the computer. This position handles bi-weekly
payroll for all employees and related record keeping,
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Minimum Education and experience: High school
education or G.E.D and two years related experience and/
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org until the position is filled.
Anderson County is an equal
opportunity employer.
10
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
SPORTS
Bulldog XC run at Osage City
OSAGE CITY – The Anderson
County boys finished 6th at the
Osage City Invite last week.
The only top 20 finisher on
the day was Addie Fudge for
the girls. Addie finished in
20th place with a time of 22:07.
Kassie Mains was the only
other girls runner on the day.
She finished in 35th with a time
of 23:39.
For the boys, Brody Barnes
(18:10) paced them once again
and finished 26th.
Grant Nienstedt (18:12) was
just two places back in 28th and
Brodie Wiesner (18:29) was 31st.
Landon Kraft (18:52) and
Bo Johnston (18:55) finished
the afternoon in 40th and 43rd
respectively.
Also running for the varsity boys were Zykin Velvick
(19:41, 63rd place) and Easton
Wettstein (20:31, 75th).
Burlington runs past the Bulldogs
BURLINGTON – Anderson
County jumped out to a quick
7-0 lead scoring on the games
opening play last Friday but
Burlington would reel off the
games final 31 points to win
going away.
After receiving the opening kickoff and taking possession at their own 42 yardline,
Preston Kueser connected
with Christopher Barnett for a
58-yard touchdown strike and
following the extra point the
Bulldogs led 7-0.
Burlington would score lone
touchdowns in each of the first
three quarters to take a 19-7
lead heading into the fourth
before taking on two more late
touchdowns to put a stamp on
the 31-7 win.
After the opening play, the
Bulldogs mustered just 151
yards on 52 plays (2.9 yards per
play) over the games final 47
minutes.
Burlington connected on 10
of 12 passes for 85 yards on the
night and rushed the ball 45
times for 268 yards (6 yards per
carry) and scored all 5 of their
touchdowns on the ground.
Next up for the Bulldogs is a
home game against Girard (2-4)
on Friday night. Girard has
lost their last 3 games and the
Bulldogs are currently on a 4
game skid of their own.
Vikings earn split with Northern Heights
RICHMOND – Central Heights
picked up their first home win
of the year and 2nd win of the
season over Northern Heights
last Tuesday.
Northern Heights would
have the upperhand in the
opening game, winning in two
sets 25-20 and 26-24.
Sydney Evans kept the
Vikings in the first game scoring 10 points, was perfect on 13
serves and tallied 5 aces.
Central Heights would rally
in the second game and win
a 3-set thriller 25-23, 17-25 and
25-23.
The Lady Vikings recored 23
kills in the second game, led by
8 from Maisy Moore and 7 from
Lyla Hamblin.
Kaylr Matile was the star
server in the second game,
scoring 15 points and recording
5 of the teams 9 aces for the
match.
Bulldog volleyball wins a pair on the road
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2023 / DANE HICKS
Central Heights quarterback Brody Roullett fires a pass to wide receiver Reed Compton during Fridays
game with Northern Heights, setting up a yardage game that yielded the Vikings first score of the night
in what would become a 42-0 homecoming win.
WELLSVILLE – Last Tuesday,
the Anderson County Bulldogs
traveled to Wellsville and
knocked off both Osawatomie
and Wellsville.
Anderson County knocked
off Osawatomie in 2 sets, winning the first set with ease 25-10
and had to fight off a pesky Oz
team in the second set, 27-25.
Against Wellsville, the Lady
Bulldogs won 25-18 in the opening set and finished off the host
team 25-21 in the second set.
Vikings XC continues to make history ACHS Invites doubles as Pioneer League tourney
OSAGE CITY It is really
seeming like the same story
every week with the Central
Heights Vikings cross country
team as they somehow seem
to one-up themselves from the
previous week.
There is only one way to
describe their performance
from last week at Osage City.
Record breaking.
Emma Cubits 19:15 smashed
the high school girls 5K record
previously set by Lily Meyer
(19:42) in 2018. As incredible as
the record is on its own, Emma
also topped one of the best 3A
runners in the State and was
less than 10 seconds behind one
of the top 4A runners in the
State.
Following suit, Melaney
Chrisjohn also ran her best
time ever by over 15 seconds
while Arabella Dunbar, Landry
Sparks and Sky DyersonFritchman also set new personal records.
I am so proud of how hard
they pushed themselves and I
couldnt ask for a better leader and role model for all of
them than Emma, a very
proud Vikings head coach Troy
Prosser stated.
The boys also went out with
one goal in mind and achieved
it by setting marks that Central
Heights has simply never seen
before.
After Cody Hammond's
record-breaking performance
last week, he, Connor Burkdoll
and Owen Miller all crushed
that very mark cementing
themselves as the top three
fastest runners in Viking history. In fact, the top six boys
all set new personal records
to claim the team title with
30 points. The 17 minute barrier has traditionally been a
very elusive barrier for us but
yesterday Christian McCord
(17:02) was close and Miller
(16:08) destroyed his previous
best of 16:50.
Then,
Burkdoll
and
Hammond went one further
and dropped below 16 minutes as the first two to ever
do so in the Vikings uniform.
Burkdoll's 15:57 was a massive personal record by over a
minute and Hammonds 15:50
now stands as the new school
record as he broke it for the
second time in two weeks. With
Stetson Miller and Hunter
Johnsons strong races, the
Vikings top six runners are
now all sub 18 minutes.
The middle school squads
both ran as full teams for the
first time this season and came
out with both team titles. Lily
Burkdoll ran a great race and
was only one second off of her
own personal record to lead
her team to four medal finishes.
Josiah Meyer blew past his
own personal record by nearly
20 seconds and is now within
earshot of the middle school
boys school record (held by
Connor Burkdoll). With five
boys in the top 14 and five
girls in the top 11, they have
set themselves up to compete
well at next weeks Flint Hills
League meet.
Prosser concluded, Heading
into the championship meets
of the season with 32 personal
records and two school records
on the day is another big step
in the right direction.
Results
Varsity Boys 5K – 1st
2nd – Cody Hammond (15:50)
4th – Connor Burkdoll (15:57)
5th – Owen Miller (16:08)
10th – Christian McCord (17:02)
15th – Stetson Miller (17:24)
23rd – Hunter Johnson
(17:58) PR
Varsity Girls 5K – 6th
3rd – Emma Cubit (19:15)
10th – Melaney Chrisjohn
(20:54)
37th – Arabella Dunbar (23:49)
47th – Landry Sparks (24:53)
51st – Sky Dyerson-Fritchman
(25:09)
JV Boys 5K – 1st
1st – Aidan Howland (19:05)
2nd – Aydan Dunbar (19:08)
3rd – Cooper Moore (19:19)
4th – Russell Reed (19:20)
6th – Cash Miller (20:10)
8th – Alex Skeet (20:36)
Middle School Boys – 1st
1st – Josiah Meyer (11:23)
7th – Ben Wuertz (12:41)
10th – Mathew Dunbar (13:07)
11th – Caleb Detwiler (13:14)
14th – Knox Cannady (13:30)
35th – Presten Holstine (14:47)
36th – Andrew Wuertz (14:48)
45th – Brooks Hamilton (15:28)
Middle School Girls – 1st
2nd – Lily Burkdoll (13:01)
4th – Makenzie Moon (13:35)
7th – Ebony Hughes (13:51)
8th – Caitlynn Detwiler (13:51)
11th – Alyssa Reed (14:45)
19th – Kamden Moon (15:57)
20th – Elizabeth Meyer (16:02)
22nd – Ella Johnson (16:08)
23rd – Mackenzie Macy (16:12)
36th – Grace Tooley (17:37)
45th – Kelsie Wilson (22:09)
AC golf finishes 3rd in the Bobcat Invitational
BASEHOR – The Anderson
County golf team had another
solid finish as they traveled
to Basehor and finished the
afternoon with a team total of
401, just 7 strokes behind 2nd
place Tonganoxie and well off
Vikings cruise
past Northern
Heights
RICHMOND Central Heights
dominated Northern Heights
last friday on Homecoming
night, winning 42-0.
Vikings
quarterback
Brycean Velez led the way
completing 12 of 24 passes for
143 yards and 2 touchdowns
and one interception. Velez
also added 13 carries on 192
yards to lead the Vikings.
YOU SAW THIS.
So did your customers.
Call (785) 448-3121 to advertise.
the pace of the top finisher,
Topeka-Hayden (322).
Topeka-Hayden had the top
four finishers overall, led by
Hannah Reynoldsons 75.
Following them was ACs
Lexi Overstreet as she shot an
87.
Regan Witherspoon (96) and
Rylee Hill (99) finished 9th and
10th.
In 31st overall was Hallie
Munsey (119).
2×3 kpa yes
GARNETT – THE ACHS Lady
Bulldogs golf squad finished
5th overall at their home invitational last Monday, October
2nd, but also finished 1st in the
Pioneer League by knocking off
all their league rivals.
Their overall score of 437
narrowly knocked off Santa Fe
Trail in the league portion of
the invitational. SFT finished
the day two strokes back at 439.
Alexis Overstreet finished
in 4th with a score of 94.
Reagan Witherspoon (101)
and Rylie Hill (106) finished 4th
and 5th.
Hallie Munsey (133) was 10th
overall on the day in league
play.
The invitational was won by
Fredonia (390) and in second
place was Tonganoxie with a
score 429.
Peyton Wright of Baldwin
won the tournament shot an 80
on the day.
Overstreets 94 was good for
9th overall. Witherspoon finished in 12th place, Hill 20th
and Munsey in 48th.
List of Personal Property tax warrants
(First published in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, October 10, 2023.)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
TRABERT
FROM PAGE 4
recommendations to improve
state assessment results, which
show Kansas has more students below grade level than
are proficient. Common sense
dictates that doing the same
things over and over again will
not suddenly reverse the trend,
but that is what the bureaucracy proposed more of the same
with more money on top.
Ideas to improve student
achievement
Several
organizations
offered ideas that buck the
status quo, and most of them
focused on changing adult
behaviors.
Build character. Troy
Pitsch, Superintendent of USD
329 Wabaunsee, discussed
remarkable student achievement gains since the district
embraced the Franklin Covey
Leader in Me curriculum.
The Kansas Department of
Education requires social-emotional learning to be accredited, and Wabaunsee fulfills that
mandate by teaching leadership and building character.
Embrace the science of
reading. David Hurford,
Director of the Center for
READing at Pittsburg State
University, says there is only
one effective way to teach
kids how to read, yet there are
many teachers in Kansas and
across the country who are
not trained in the science of
reading. School boards should
ensure that all teachers have
the training and use it in the
classroom.
Require districts to publish
state assessment results
on the front page of their
websites. The report should
include historical trends for
all students, low-income students, and students who are
not low-income. Current year
results for each grade tested
(3-8 and 10) should also be provided.
Accreditation should be
based primarily on academic improvement. Currently,
districts are not required to
show academic improvement
to be accredited. Indeed, much
of the accreditation model
involves paperwork and documentation at the district level
rather than each school.
Build on the Legislatures
literacy efforts by making
university funding contingent on teaching the science of reading. Wichita
Get listed
11
LOCAL
State University, Fort Hays
State University, and the
University of Kansas get good
marks from the National
Council on Teacher Quality.
Pittsburg State receives an F,
and Emporia State and Kansas
State University (so far) refuse
to provide reading course syllabi to conduct an analysis.
Expand school choice,
which has improved public
school achievement in states
with robust options. The 2023
edition of The 123s of School
Choice examined the findings
of 29 research studies of the
impacts of choice on public
school students test scores;
26 studies (90%) found positive effects, one (3%) found no
effect, and two (7%) found a
negative effect. Competition
encourages public schools to
work harder to retain students,
which is reflected in NAEP
scores for the states with
long-established and robust
choice options Florida and
Arizona. Reading and math
proficiency gains for Arizona
and Florida are much great-
2×4
D&M Mini
Barn Open
House
er than the national average.
While those states improved,
Kansas declined significantly
despite spending a lot more per
student.
Dr.
Patrick
Wolfe,
Distinguished
Professor
of Educational Policy at the
University of Arkansas, presented additional research
showing that school choice has
an overwhelmingly positive
impact on student achievement
in public and private settings.
He also cited studies showing
the societal benefits of choice,
including political tolerance,
political participation, civic
knowledge and skills, and volunteerism.
Accreditation should be
tied to full compliance with
the building needs assessment. Districts should be
required to notify parents in
writing if the accreditation status changes for not following
state law.
Students in districts that
do not follow state laws on
at-risk spending or building
needs assessments should
be eligible for education savings accounts. Both laws are
designed to improve outcomes,
so students should be allowed
to go elsewhere if district officials ignore those laws.
Modify achievement targets in the building needs
assessment law. Proficiency
should
align
with
the
Department of Educations
75% target, and another target should focus on moving
students out of Level 1 (Below
Grade Level).
Require written documentation of the budgetary changes
made (dollar amounts allocated
Call (785) 448-5711 text (785) 204-1382
to overcome barriers and the
source of the money) on each
building needs assessment.
Require school boards to
document the amount of
time spent at each board
meeting reviewing efforts
to improve student achievement in board meeting
minutes. Most school boards
spend less than 5% of the time
at board meetings reviewing
efforts to improve outcomes.
The education bureaucracy is
forcing legislators to choose
to intervene with these student-focused efforts to compel
change in adult behaviors or
accept having a third of students below grade level as the
new norm.
Dave Trabert is executive
director of the Kansas Policy
Institute, a conservative think
tank based in Wichita.
Meatballs, cheesy potatoes, roll
Daily Lunch Specials:
Mon: 1/2 BLT Sandwich or side salad, soup $8.00
Tues: Meatballs, cheesy potatoes, green beans,
dinner roll $11.50
Wed: Chicken pot pie w/biscuits, mashed
potatoes/gravy, $10.50
Thurs: Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes/gravy,
dinner roll, $10.50
Fri: Amish Wedding Feast, chicken stuffing, mashed potatoes/gravy $11.50
Sat: Chicken Fried Steak Dinner $10.50
*Soups: Mon/Tues: Cheesy Potato w/Bacon Wed/Thurs: Cheddar Broccoli
Fri/Sat: Chefs choice …… Bread bowl w/soup $6.50
in the Reviews
Business Directory for
only $8 a week!
Call (785) 448-3121
or email
review@garnett-ks.com
Banque t Facilitie s Mee ting Rooms Catering
Dutch Country Cafe
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
Saturday Breakfast Buffet 7:30-11:30
National Farmers Day
6×10.5
Forget the corporate middle-men and
National Farmers Day
the high-tech jargon and the unending
red tape and bureaucracy in the
Midwest we know its the American
Farmer who puts dinner on the table.
One U.S. farm feeds 166 people annually in the U.S. and abroad. The global
population is expected to increase by
2.2 billion by 2050.
October 12
Thank you for the generations of hard
work and stewardship of the land that
feeds our nation as well as those
beyond our shores.
Brought to you by these area businesses who value our local farmers and farm workers…
Adamson Bros.
Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett
(785) 448-6122
Barnes Seed Service, LLC
Garnett
(785) 304-2500
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Bluestem Farm & Ranch
Emporia
(620) 352-5502
Bones Rock Yard
Ottawa
(785) 242-3070
Flynn Appliance Center
Iola
(620) 365-2538
PrairieLand Partners
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Tom Adams Construction
Garnett
(785) 448-3997
Brand N Iron
Princeton
www.thebrandniron.com
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Quality Structures
Richmond
800-374-6988
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Midwest Gun & Supply
Paola
(913) 557-4867
6th Ave Boutique &
Western Wear
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Wittman NAPA Auto Parts
Garnett
(785) 448-6611
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett
(785) 448-5720
CARSTAR
Ottawa
(785) 242-8916
D&M Mini Barns
Garnett
(785) 504-9625
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett
(785) 448-2888
Farmers State Bank
Garnett
www.fsbkansas.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Midwest Collision
Paola
(913) 294-4016
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
Yutzy Custom Structures
Garnett
(800) 823-8609
12
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Crest Lancers volleyball win
two at Marmaton Valley
Don Wettstein took home the win at Heartland Motorsports Park
on Saturday, September 30th in the Super Pro category with his
1938 Chevy Roadster Super Gas race car. Pictured, from left are:
Brandon, Julie holding Sydney, Don, Sue and Seneca Wettstein all
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2023 / SUBMITTED
of Garnett. With the potential closing of this racing facility at the end
of this year, we are very happy Don won what could be one of the
last events held in Topeka. The last drag race scheduled for 2023
at HMP is October 21.
Lancers tie season win record
2×5
Sonic
TDOTW
Top Dog
of the
Week!
Connor
Burkdoll
The Viking cross country runner finished 4th at the Osage
City Invitational with a time of
15:57, knocking over a minute
off his previous best time.
Top Dog of the Week wins a $10 Sonic gift card and our
special recognition vehicle window decal. Watch for
them on the road, and each week in
UNIONTOWN Not only did
the Crest Lancers sweep all 4
games Saturday, winning the
Uniontown tournament, they
also tied the all-time win record
for a season in the process.
The four wins pushed the
Lancers record to 26-6, with still
2 games remaining in the regular season to set a new milestone.
Crest won over NE-Arma
in 3 sets (21-25, 25-20, 25-21),
KC Christian (25-6, 25-23) and
Central Heights (25-9, 25-9)
before downing Galena for first
place in a 3-set thriller 23-25,
25-17 and 25-19.
We had some struggles
throughout the day, but the
girls stayed together and went
undefeated, Lancer Coach
Abigail Hermreck stated.
The composure of the team
is what has made this record a
possibility.
They did not get rattled, but
dug deep and found a way to
get momentum back in those
moments of struggle, Coach
Hermreck added. We still have
work to do, but I am so proud
of the determination they displayed and the dedication they
have to the team.
Kayla Hermreck led the team
with 64 kills. She had 26 assists,
31 digs, and served 21/28 with 5
ace serves.
Brooklynn Jones had 5 kills,
7 assists, 21 digs, and served
48/56 at 86% leading the team
with 14 aces.
Karlee Boots had 19 kills, 22
digs, and served 24/25 at 96%
with 3 ace serves.
Cursten Allen had 1 kill, 3
digs, and added a much needed
spark passing at critical times.
Kinley Edgerton led the team
with 54 assists and 38 digs. She
had 11 kills and served 53/55 at
96% with 5 ace serves and Aylee
Beckmon had 5 kills, 4 assists,
28 digs, and served 25/29 and
86% with 4 ace serves.
Kaelin NIlges had 6 kills, 7
assists and 16 digs. She served
43/45 at 96% wit 7 ace serves.
The Lancers will be looking
to set the record tonight against
Yates Center in matches with
the host team and SE Cherokee.
MORAN With a pair of
wins last Tuesday, the Crest
Lancers moved their record to
22-6 overall and 8-1 in Three
Rivers League play.
In the first game, the
Lancers knocked off St. Paul in
two sets, 25-16 and 25-13.
They
also
downed
Marmaton Valley in straight
sets, 25-15 and 25-17.
Strong serving from Kayla
Hermreck (16/16 at 100% with
3 ace serves), Kaelin Nilges(
28/29 at 97% with 3 ace serves),
Brooklynn Jones (27/28 at 96%
with 7 ace serves) and Kinley
Edgerton (13/16 at 81 %) was a
major factor in the team's success. The Lancers served 91%
as a team.
Kinley Edgerton did a fantastic job setting and getting
the ball to our hitters, Lancer
head coach Abigail Hermreck
stated. The passes weren't
always there, but she was making plays.
Edgerton led the team with
29 assists and had 5 kills.
Karlee Boots led the team
with 15 digs and had some hard
swings and placed the ball well.
She had 12 kills that were huge
to keep the Lancers rolling.
Kayla Hermreck led the
team with 27 kills and 3 blocks.
She made some great decisions at the net and made big
plays, Hermreck added.
Aylee Beckmon led the team
in serve receive passing and
had some hustle plays. Coach
Hermreck praised her ability
on getting the ball to the setters.
Our Libero, Cursten Allen,
continues to make hustle plays
and terrific passes for the
team, Hermreck stated. She
comes off of the bench giving
100% and is always talking.
Coach also was happy with
Kaelin Nilges as she had several hustle plays and was quick
at anticipating on defense and
at the net and feels Brooklynn
Jones was doing a great job
at getting the free balls to the
setter and covering the setters
corner.
Tonight was a challenge
for us mentally too. Moran was
playing well and attacking at
the net, Coach said. We got
down by 3 points and rallied
together to come back. I was
proud of the girls for pulling
together, being aggressive, and
going for the win.
Echoes from Our Past
Garnett Cemetery walk
The Garnett Public Library
will host its first ever cemetery walk Saturday, October
21st, from 5 p.m. until dusk.
Join us for an evening
discussion of people in our
past, gravestone symbols and
history! Established in 1859,
Garnett Cemetery now consists of the original cemetery and has four additions.
We will focus on graves of
interest in the oldest part of
the cemetery, meanings and
markings of tombstones and
the history surrounding cemeteries. We will also highlight
how visitors to the cemetery
can use the Find A Grave app
to help others in their quest
for genealogy information.
This program is geared
toward adults but all ages are
welcome. Please wear comfortable shoes as the ground
is slightly uneven. No public restroom facilities are at
the cemetery. Seating will be
available in areas toured.
This event will be hosted at
the Garnett Cemetery located at 27554 NE Neosho Road,
Garnett, Kansas just northeast of town. Arrive 10 minutes early to gather near the
chapel.
There is no charge for this
event. We hope to see you
there!

