Anderson County Review — October 10, 2024
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from October 10, 2024. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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Probitas, Veritas,
Integritas In Summa
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, 2024
SINCE 1865 158th Year, No. 38
The
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itsits
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Ottawa man to be
sentenced on 3rd DUI
Threes no charm with year
in jail possible and continued
driving restrictions, fines
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT An Ottawa man could face
up to a year in jail after pleading no
contest to a third DUI charge within
10 years.
Brian C. Shaffer, 51 of Ottawa, will
be sentenced October 21 in Anderson
County District Court in connection
with the cumulative third offense, after
he was arrested in January of this year
on charges of driving under the influence, transporting an open container,
and operating a vehicle without an
ignition interlock device required after
a previous DUI.
The complaint charges Shaffers
blood alcohol content at .225 at the
time of arrest. The legal alcohol limit
to operate a motor vehicle in Kansas is
.08.
Court records show Shaffer entered
into a diversion on a first DUI charge in
Ottawa in 2008, and was subsequently
convicted of a second in 2020.
The third DUI carries a Level 6 felony conviction with driving privileges
suspended for one year and after that
a year with vehicle interlock. State
law says proof of such
devices installation
and use shall be provided to the Division
of Motor Vehicles
before driving privileges are fully reinstated, and the possible impoundment
Shaffer of the vehicle for up
to one year. A third
offense
typically
means 90 days to one year imprisonment and fines of $1,500 to $2,500 plus
court costs, probation and evaluation
fees, as well as completion of a court
ordered alcohol treatment program.
Under Kansas law driving privileges
are not permanently suspended until a
drivers fifth DUI.
County commissioners
want to ditch Swank Park
Property is lawsuit waiting
to happen they say; search is
on for heirs to give it back
BY DANE HICKS
Local law officers and emergency personnel assist 19
year-old Dylan Hanson of Lawrence out of his vehicle
on the rock bank of Lake Garnett Tuesday, after Hanson
apparently lost control of the car while traveling at a high
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2024 / DANE HICKS
rate of speed at the Snyder Corner and skidded 275
feet to the waters edge. Garnett Police Chief Kurt King
said Hanson was written a number of traffic citations in the
incident. No one was injured.
March 2025 trial date
set for church lawsuit
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A pre-trial conference
has been scheduled for January of
next year in a civil lawsuit pitting
a former Garnett pastor against
members of the local First Baptist
Church whom he says scuttled his
attempted sale of the church parsonage property to cover church
expenses.
The pre-trial meeting set for
January 13th, 2025, predates a
bench trial in the case presently
scheduled for two days on March
12th and 13th.
The court action culminates an
ongoing feud between members
of the church and former pas-
tor Daniel Meyer, who filed suit
against former church members
Rose Miller, Warren Winfrey and
LeRoy Teter in April after the
three attached a sworn affidavit to
the deed for the church parsonage
at 510 North Cedar that said Meyer
had no legal authority as church
management.
Meyer had negotiated the sale
of the property to cover what he
said were church expenses after
membership there dropped so
low due to what some church
members said was his autocratic
and eccentric approach to church
management that its revenues
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Anderson County
Commissioners hope tracking down
heirs to the Swank family estate will
help them get rid of Swank Park, a
160-acre parcel of acreage the county
accepted as a gift in 1984 but which
commissioners say is now more trouble than its worth.
Commissioners directed county
counselor James Campbell to engage
the services of a search firm to attempt
to track down any heirs to the Mel
and Margie Swank family, who left the
acreage to the county in their estate in
1984 on the condition that the parcel be
used for a public park. The plan is to
SEE SWANK ON PAGE 5
For this weekends LGGPR…Know your track
Know the proper terminology for this weekends Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Revival at Lake Garnett Park by studying this 1960s-era race track map.
More info on the event is available in our LGGPR feature on Page 6.
SEE LAWSUIT ON PAGE 12
Local EMS workers help out with damage
County rotates four staff
so far into hurricane zones
as Milton aims for Florida
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
TAMPA, Fla. Anderson County's
director of ambulance services
assured county residents last week
that local emergency services were
still covered while ambulance
department staff rotated in and out
of hurricane zones as volunteers and
relief efforts.
Anderson County Emergency
Medical Services Director Troy
Armstrong said county EMT
Maralee Clark and Ashli Gavel
would deploy this week to relieve
himself and EMT Wyatt Westhoff
who are currently in Florida serving as part of a national relief effort
that has routed emergency workers
to the scene of the disasters from
all over the country. At midweek
additional personnel and resources
were being directed to Florida for
the encroaching Hurricane Milton,
an even stronger storm which was
set to follow Hurricane Helene into
the gulf states late yesterday with
Category 4 ferocity. Armstrong credited the local EMS staff stepping up
to cover vacancies with the countys
ability to send staff to help those in
need on the coasts.
I also want to highlight the
importance of all the personnel with
EMS for ensuring county coverage,
Armswtrong said. We have been
able to maintain this federal-level
deployment with no lapse in service
delivery to our citizens.
A statement from the Kansas
Fire Marshals office outlined the
assistance volunteer emergency
responders from the Sunflower State
rendered to hurricane victims in
the states deployed team. The statement said the first batch of Kansas
volunteer responders to the hurricane-ravaged east coast was back
in the state Tuesday and another
already deployed Sunday.
Kansas Task Force 1 was demobilized the morning of Oct. 7, 2024,
and began their journey back to
Kansas, a KFM Facebook post said.
Their last full day in Burnsville,
North Carolina, KS-TF1 continued
to support the local community and
marking search areas for future follow up. The search and rescue efforts
by KS-TF1 in North Carolina and
Florida were a valuable and key part
of the recovery for the local communities. Take time to remember
SEE HELP ON PAGE 9
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2024 / KANSAS FIRE MARSHALS OFFICE
Members of Kansas Task Force 1 are briefed before the days work begins at one of
two hurricane damage scenes on the East Coast last week.
2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
ANDERSON COUNTY GOP
PICNIC SET OCT. 19 AT PARK
All Anderson County Republicans are invited to a pot luck
picnic at noon Saturday, Oct.
19, 2024, at the west shelter
house in Lake Garnett Park.
Hot dogs, drinks and table service will be provided, bring a
covered dish to share. Meet
your Republican candidates
and make plans for Republican
victories in 2024.
SENIOR CENTER CONCERT
There will be a concert at the
Senior Center on October 12th
from 6-8 pm. The band The
Odds & Ends will perform classic country, western swing, and
old time rock & roll. Free admission. Snacks will be served.
Come join us for a fun evening
with friends.
COMMUNITY BREAKFAST
The Pottawatomie Township
Ruritan are having a community
breakfast on Saturday, October
12, from 7 a.m. – 9 a.m. at
the Lane Community Building.
Pancakes, biscuits & gravy,
french toast, scrambled eggs &
sausage patties will be served.
Please note Novembers breakfast will be Saturday, Nov. 16th.
AMERICAN LEGION BINGO
Bingo at American Legion Post
48 Garnett will be held every
Tuesday, starting time at 6:30 p.m.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 will have breakfast Sunday, October 20, from 9
a.m. – 1 p.m. Biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage
& eggs will be served.
GREELEY ELEMENTARY
HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL
Greeley Elementary will be
holding their annual Halloween
Carnival and Raffle On Friday,
October 18, 2024 from 6:00
p.m. to 8:00 p.m. in the school
gymnasium.
.
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
SEPTEMBER 30, 2024
Chairman Leslie McGhee called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM
on September 30, 2024 at the
Anderson County Commission Room.
Attendance: Leslie McGhee, Present:
David Pracht, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The Pledge of
Allegiance was recited. Minutes from
the previous meeting were approved
as presented.
Road & Bridge
Ethan Lickteig, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission.
He presented an agreement between
BG Consultants and Anderson
County for the bridge replacement
on Nevada Road north of 2100 Road.
The Commissioners would like James
Campbell to review it as well as have
Ethan get a couple more bids for the
engineering of the bridge. Discussion
was held on county equipment and
repairs that have been completed.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM due
to no further business.
CREST UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
NO. 479
October 7th, 2024 Special Board
Meeting Minutes
A special monthly meeting of the
Board of Education of Crest Unified
School District #479 was held at
the Crest Board Office, Colony, on
Monday, October 7th, 2024. The meeting was called to order at 5:00 p.m. by
Board President Travis Church.
Roll Call
Board Members Present Nathan
Beckmon, Seth Black, Travis Church,
Kevin Nilges, Lance Ramsey and
Laura Schmidt.
Board Member Absent – Jamie
Henderson
Others Present Superintendent
Shane Walter, Board Clerk Lynette
Prasko, Randy Flowers, Greg Tice
and Lois Prochaska-Frack
The meeting was called for the purpose of discussion and possible action
on the following:
1. SPT Architecture and Loyd
Builders Phase 2 Bid and Design
Approval
2. Personnel – Executive Session
A waiver of notice was signed by the
board members present.
SPT Architecture/Loyd Builders
Phase 2 Bid and Design Approval
Randy Flowers with Loyd Builders presented the Construction Summary and
discussed the status of the bidding
process for Phase 2 for bond improvements to school facilities. Greg Tice
and Lois Prochaska-Frack with SPT
Architecture discussed the drawings/
plans for Phase 2 construction with the
board.
At 6:30 p.m. Mr. Lance Ramsey
exited the meeting.
Personnel Executive Session It
was moved by Mr. Travis Church and
seconded by Mr. Kevin Nilges to enter
into executive session for the purpose
of discussing district staffing. The rea-
son for the session was the non-elected personnel exemption under KOMA.
The meeting was to resume in the
board room at 6:40 p.m. Mr. Walter
was invited to attend. Vote: 5-0 The
open meeting reconvened in the board
room at 6:40 p.m. and no action was
taken.
Adjournment It was moved by
Mr. Seth Black and seconded by Mr.
Nathan Beckmon to adjourn the meeting at 6:41 p.m. Vote: 5-0
ANDERSON COUNTY LAND
TRANSFERS
Beverly A North to Albert Eugene
Thacker Jr and Stephanie Thacker: All
lot 16 & north 35 lot 15 block 7 Baileys
Orchard Park Addition (rev 1978) to
City of Garnett.
Abigail Lynn Rue and Lillian Marie
Rue to Mark A Chriestenson: All of
undivided 1/2 interest in the following: s2 sw4 nwfr4 19-20-21, less beg
at swcor nwfr4 19-20-21, thence east
660, thence north 660, thence west
660, thence south 660 to pob.
Sharon A Spencer, Colette A
Spencer and Colette Spencer A/K/A
to William C Foulke Jr and Louann M
Mundell: Lot 13 blk 38 as described
upon the subdivision plat of Town of
Greeley on file in office of register of
deeds of Anderson County, being the
s2 lot 1 blk 38 as shown on the original
plat of said town.
Benjamin R Spencer and Sydney
M Spencer to Benjamin & Sydney
Spencer Land LLC: Nw4 15-21-18 &
ne4 16-21-18 & nw4 nw4 14-21-18 &
nw4 & ne4 sw4 2-23-18 less hwy & rr;
& e2 nw4 & sw4 nw4 35-22-17 & nw4
nw4 35-22-17 & w2 ne4 35-22-17 &
nw4 nw4 14-21-18 & ne4 2-23-18 less
6 acres, more or less in necor ne4 said
section 2, described as 36 rods east
and west by 27 rods north and south
(the 6 acres, more or less, deducted
from ne4 being described as com at
necor said ne4, thence west 37 rods,
thence south 27 rods, thence east 37
rods, thence north to pob).
Brent L Schick and Tammy R Schick
to Brent L Schick and Tammy R Schick:
Lot 11 blk 27 City of Greeley, less north
31.18 feet (as measured; or north 31
according to plat) of lot 11 blk 27 in
original plat of City of Greeley.
ANDERSON COUNTY CRIMINAL
CASES FILED
Haley Nicole Ladewig has been
charged with permitting a dangerous
animal to be at large.
Brandon Edward Mills has been
charged with violation of the Kansas
Offender Registration Act.
Austein J Houston-Denoyelles has
been charged with criminal threat.
Austein J Houston-Denoyelles has
been charged with criminal threat and
aggravated assault.
Austein J Houston-Denoyelles has
been charged disorderly conduct.
Austein J Houston-Denoyelles has
been charged with domestic battery
and assault.
Paul Arnold Roger Bailey II was
charged with driving under the influence and reckless driving.
Hollis F Grewing has been charaged
with battery against a law enforcement
officer, interference with law enforcement and disorderly conduct.
Italy C Loving has been charged
with disorderly conduct.
May Marie Bennett has been
charged with permitting a dangerous
animal to be at large.
ANDERSON COUNTY TRAFFIC
CASES FILED
Cali Ann Seck has been charged
with speeding 75 mph in a 65 mph
zone.
Pierce Nathaniel Smith has been
charged with speeding 80 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Jesus Emilio Canales has been
charged with operating a motor vehicle without a valid license. and speeding 83 mph in a 65 mph zone.
Hanson Dylan Corey Allen has
been charged with operating a vehicle
without registration or with an expired
tag and for defective headlamps on
motor vehicle.
Dylan Louis McCutchen has been
charged with speeding 82 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Ethan Andrew Weide has been
charged with speeding 80 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Sarah Elizabeth Stewart has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a 65
mph aone.
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW October 10, 2024 / SUBMITTED
Kaelin Nilges was crowned the 2024 Kincaid Fair queen during
the parade on September 28th. She is pictured with the 2023 fair
queen, Kinley Edgerton.
Call (785) 448-5711 text (785) 204-1382
Soups Are Back!
Daily
Lunch
Specials:
Mon: Open face turkey sandwich on bread topped
with mashed potatoes, turkey & turkey gravy.
Tues: BBQ meatballs, cheesy potatoes,
green beans and dinner roll.
Wed: Chicken pot pie with biscuit, mashed potatoes with chicken gravy.
Thurs: Fried Chicken Dinner w/roll, mashed potatoes & gravy.
Fri: Amish Wedding Feast, chicken stuffing, green beans, maxhd potatoes and chickn gravy
Sat: Chicken Fried Steak Dinner w/ homemade mashed potatoes & gravy, dinner roll
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
October 12, 2024
Thank You To Our Local Farmers for their dedication and hard work!
Adamson Bros.
Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Arnolds Prairie Greenhouse
LeRoy
(620) 964-2423
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
Brand N Iron
Princeton
www.thebrandniron.com
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.
Flynn Appliance Center
Iola
(620) 365-2538
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Midwest Collision
Paola
(913) 294-4016
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
PrairieLand Partners
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Quality Structures
Richmond
800-374-6988
Tom Adams Construction
Garnett
(785) 448-3997
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
6th Ave Boutique &
Western Wear
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Wittman NAPA Auto Parts
Garnett
(785) 448-6611
Yutzy Custom Structures
Garnett
(800) 823-8609
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
CRAIG
AUGUST 18, 1936 OCTOBER 8, 2024
Barbara Craig, age 88, of
Garnett, Kansas passed away
on Tuesday, October 8, 2024.
Barbara June Ulses was
born
on
A u g u s t
18, 1936 in
Garnett,
K a n s a s .
She was the
fourth
of
four children
born to Fred
and
Ellis
Craig
(Hunt) Ulses.
Barbara was
a graduate of Garnett High
Schools Class of 1954, and
graduated from Kansas State
Teachers College (Emporia
State University) in 1958 with
a degree in Education.
Barbara married the love
of her life, Bill on October 17,
1959 at Holy Angels Church
in Garnett. They were blessed
with two children, Todd and
Michelle Mitch. Barbara and
Bill were married for 58 years
until his passing on November
5, 2016.
Barbara was a school teacher
for many years, teaching third
grade at Irving Elementary
in Garnett. She enjoyed her
years teaching and formed
many lasting friendships with
her fellow teachers and administrators. She also enjoyed
working part-time at B & F
Clothing with the owners Bill
Feuerborn and Dave Brummel.
Barbara enjoyed participating
in Nova Vista and loved entertaining and playing pitch with
her pitch club friends. Barbara
and Bill spent a lifetime rooting for and attending Kansas
State Wildcat games. They had
season tickets for years with
Todd and Mitch and when
their granddaughter Madison
was born continued attending
games with her. Barbara was
known as Mimi to her only
granddaughter. Madisons
Mimi was a mentor to her; a
guiding light always shining
on her and leading her in the
right direction. They shared
a special bond. Mimi will be
sorely missed.
Following a fall at home
in December of 2023, Barbara
struggled to regain her mental and physical abilities. She
battled valiantly to regain her
independence, but in-the-end
lost her fight. The family wish-
es to express their heartfelt
thanks and appreciation to
the staff at Parkview Heights
and Good Shepherd Hospice
for their loving care over the
past several months and in
her final days. A special thank
you to family friend Beauchet
Dougherty
who
visited
Barbara countless times at the
hospital and at Parkview; you
have our everlasting thanks
for comforting Barbara and
assisting her daughter Mitch
in caring for her mother and
for providing moral support
throughout Barbaras illness.
We are also grateful for Denise
Scheibmeir for taking Barbara
to her doctor appointments
and for being a wonderful
friend. Lastly, the family wishes to express a sincere thank
you to Steve Mayes. After Bills
passing Steve provided a great
deal of companionship and
assistance to Barbara helping
her maintain her home and
property.
Barbara was also preceded
in death by her parents, and
her sister Francis Thomas.
Barbara is survived by
her son, Todd Craig and his
wife Shannon of Allen, Texas,
daughter, Michelle Byerley
and her husband David of
Overland Park, Kansas; granddaughter Madison Byerley
of Overland Park, Kansas;
two brothers, Gerald Dave
Ulses and his wife Delores of
Overland Park, Kansas, Carl
Ulses of Garnett, Kansas; and
three sisters-in-law, Kathleen
Schmidt of Wathena, Kansas,
Fran Sandwith of Soda
Springs, California, Vicki
Sparks, and husband Jim of
Graeagle, California; and nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 10:30 A.M. on Tuesday,
October 15, 2024, at Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service
Chapel in Garnett, Kansas,
with burial following in Holy
Angels Cemetery. The family
will greet friends at Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service
Chapel in Garnett on Monday
evening from 5:30 P.M to 7:30
P.M. Memorial contributions
can be made to the USD 365
Endowment
Association.
Condolences may be sent to
the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com
Greeley Elementary Halloween
Carnival set for October 18
Greeley Elementary will be
holding their annual Halloween
Carnival and Raffle on Friday,
October 18, 2024 from 6:00 p.m.
to 8:00 p.m. in the school gymnasium.
A $1.00 raffle and quarter raffle
will be held that evening. The
$1.00 raffle tickets can be pur-
chased from Greeley students,
Bank of Greeley, and the night
of the carnival. Games include:
bingo, pop bottle ring toss, a cake
walk, photo booth and much
more! A concession stand will
serve walking tacos, hot dogs,
pop, candy, and more.
Colony Christian Church 10/6 service
Pastor Chase Riebel continued his series in Joshua from
Chapter 14 this week. Israel had
been fighting a lot of battles to
rid the promised land of sinful
and idolatrous tribes so that
Israel could occupy the land as
God desired. As the land was
distributed among the 12 tribes,
Caleb was given a special allotment because he had wholeheartedly followed the Lord.
For communion meditation Brant McGhee pondered
the powerful miracles that
occurred during the crucifixion. As Jesus' body was broken and His blood shed on the
cross the spiritual world was
changed forever.
Lexy Langworthy led worship
accompanied by Ben Prasko
on keyboard. The songs were
"Victory in Jesus," "Mighty to
Save" and "Man of Sorrows."
Regular Sunday service is
at 10:45 at 211 Catalpa street in
Colony, Ks.
3
OBITUARIES
COOVER
JANUARY 24, 1945 SEPTEMBER 27, 2024
Terry D. Coover, age 79, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Friday, September 27, 2024,
at Richmond Healthcare in
Richmond, Kansas.
A Celebration of Life was
held Saturday, October 5, 2024,
at Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel in Garnett,
Kansas.
KEIM
OCTOBER 31, 1949 OCTOBER 4, 2024
Dorothy Keim, age 74, of
Garnett, Kansas passed away
on Friday, October 4, 2024 at
her home.
Funeral services were
October 8, 2024, at the Amish
Community Building, Garnett,
Kansas. Burial followed in the
Amish Cemetery.
KNOX
FEBRUARY 4, 1954 OCTOBER 5, 2024
Diana Marie Knox died
peacefully in her home on
October 5, 2024.
A memorial service will be
held at 10:30 A.M., Saturday,
October 12, 2024, at First
Christian Church in Garnett,
Kansas. Family will greet
friends one hour prior to service, at 9:30 A.M.
Chapter Y P.E.O. met in October
Chapter Y P.E.O. met at the
Garnett Public Library in the
Archer Room on Monday evening, October 7, 2024.
Pam Covault and Becky King
were hostess and co-hostess.
Pastor Scott King with the
Anderson County Ministerial
Alliance spoke to the group on
the "Grief Share" program that
the Ministerial Alliance has
organized in Anderson County.
This program is open to anyone
in Anderson County who wishes to join. If interested contact
your pastor to find out more
information as to when they
meet and where they meet. You
can also contact the Church of
the Nazarene at 785-448-3208.
The next P.E.O.meeting
will be October 21, 2024 in the
Archer Room at the library.
Rita Boydston and Deanna
Wolken will be hostess and
co-hostess.
Brandi Buzzard Frobose will
be the guest speaker presenting
the program "Women in Ag".
Please bring non-perishable
items to donate to ECKAN.
Yielding your heart to
co-operate with God
The Bible does not go into
any detail to prove the existence of God. The first verse
says what God did. In the
beginning God created the
heavens and the earth. From
Genesis to Revelation the Bible
is the story of God searching
the earth for people who will
yield their heart to co-operate
with him.
Heaven is firmly established
as the dwelling place of God,
with Paradise (the third heaven) the throne room of God. In
Luke 23:43 Jesus tells the thief
who is being crucified alongside of him, Today you will
be with me in Paradise. So
we know God exists and he
has a dwelling place far away
from earth. In Daniel 9:20-23
we read of a visit Daniel the
prophet received from the
angel Gabriel. Gabriel tells
Daniel As soon as you began
to pray, an answer was given
which I have come to tell you,
for you are highly esteemed.
From this we see that God can
communicate between heaven
and earth.
So what is God like? Job tells
us in Job 9:32-35. He, God is
not a man like me that I might
answer him, that we might
confront each other in court.
If only there were someone to
arbitrate between us, to lay his
hand upon us both someone to
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
remove Gods rod from me, so
that his terror would frighten me no more. Then I would
speak up without fear of him,
but as it now stands with me
I cannot. Since God is not a
man like us he sent Jesus as
the arbitrator that Job sought
in Job 9.
Jesus had two natures a
human nature and a divine
nature. The two natures were
without mixture, confusion or
division which made Jesus the
God/man. When Jesus ascended to heaven in Acts 1 he tells
the disciples he will leave them
a helper or comforter which
is the Holy Spirit who changes peoples hearts from stone
to flesh. It is the Holy Spirit
who fights against the ungodly systems that we pursue to
find value and self-worth in our
lives. It is the Holy Spirit who
works to bring you and I to the
point where we will yield our
hearts to co-operate with God.
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 1
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
(as of October 2, 2024)
Joseph Wilper was booked into jail
on October 20, 2023.
Chester Casida was booked into jail
on April 5, 2024.
Kevin Labelle was booked into jail
on April 25, 2024.
Joshua Caddell was booked into jail
on May 12, 2024.
Christopher Mosley was booked
into jail on May 22, 2024.
Shawn Harris was booked into jail
on May 23, 2024.
Jason Boothe was booked into jail
on June 26, 2024.
Chad Kammerer was booked into
jail on July 5, 2024.
Stuart Wieland was booked into jail
on July 21, 2024.
William Vandenberg was booked
into jail on July 25, 2024.
James Chambers was booked into
jail on August 15, 2024.
Jose Lopez-Amador was booked
into jail on August 27, 2024.
Stephen Putthoff was booked ito jail
on August 30, 2024.
Jesse Osborn was booked into jail
on September 23, 2024.
Andrew Marshall was booked into
jail on September 23, 2024.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
(as of October 2, 2024)
Dawson Paine was booked into jail
on July 12, 2024.
Timothy Brown was booked into jail
on July 26, 2024.
Timothy Blanton was booked into
jail on August 21, 2024.
Christomer Hassell was booked
into jail on September 12, 2024.
Sandra Cecil was booked into jail
on September 14, 2024.
Christina Geske was booked into
jail on September 14, 2024.
Doyle Stryker was booked into jail
on September 14, 2024.
Shawna Valentin was booked into
jail on September 14, 2024.
Delwin Watkins was booked into jail
on September 14, 2024.
James Adell was booked into jail on
September 30, 2024.
Jesse King was booked into jail on
September 30, 2024.
Carmen Thornton was booked into
jail on September 30, 2024.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
OPINION
Waiting for Democrats October doozy
Indeed we are past due for the big surprise of
the November 5th presidential election. But its
coming.
If history is the predictor that we are told to
believe it is, then sometime between now and
election day, most likely not more than 2 weeks
before the polls open, some startling Donald
Trump revelation will be exploded into the public discourse by Democrats bent on sealing the
current campaign standoff for Kamala Harris.
But its going to have to be a good one. To
rise above the Democrats eight-year failed line
of bombastic attack, someones going to have to
produce video evidence alleging Trumps either
a pedophile or an alien from outer space.
Predicting an October surprise is no particular feat looking back to 2016, when a month
before the election Democrats unloaded the now
nearly forgotten Billy Bush/Access Hollywood
bombshell boorish locker room talk caught
on a hot mic from 2005 in which Trump relayed
his supposed experience that women were sexually eager for celebrity company. It ended
up not costing Trump the election to Hillary
Clinton thanks to the Electoral College but it
did foment an entirely new department in the
franchise of hatred for the billionaire from
noble defenders of womenhood, who themselves
would later abandon female athletes to the invasion of men in their sports and locker rooms.
So much for girl power.
But just about everything Trump does turns
to gold for someone. Blowback from his comments and hundreds of thousands of female
marchers swearing their loathing created an
entirely new market for a certain style of pink
stocking cap. Trump should have trademarked
the name.
Little did America know this final grenade,
chucked into the campaign by Democrats 11
years after it was uttered and with what they
believed would be just enough time to ruminate
and poison the electorate for Trump, was merely the latest in dirty trickery they had arrayed
against him. It would be several years before the
facts of the Obama-assisted Clinton campaigns
funding of the Steele Dossier and its conveyance
to the FBI to base press leaks of the now-famed
Russian Collusion hoax would become public knowledge. It was an elaborate scheme to
defraud the electorate with a final haymaker
punch to ensure Hillary Clinton was the first
female president of the United States.
Fast forward to October 2024 with Kamala
Harris ascension to the campaigns throne after
Bidens figurative beheading by his partys
elites, and the Democrats are in even more des-
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
perate need of a nuclear option.
Avoiding real media interviews and press
conferences didnt bolster Kamala Harris poll
numbers, in fact she lost ground. And the spate
of recent banana-peel public appearances only
gave her an opportunity to dig a deeper hole.
She told the cacklers of ABCs The View she
couldnt think of a single Biden Administration
decision that she would have made differently
(an easy one would have been the tactical disaster that cost 13 U.S. service members their lives
in the Afghanistan retreat debacle) and she
doubled down by assuring her scatter brained
on-stage cohorts that she had been intimately
involved in all the Biden decisions the repertoire that so soured the American public the
illuminati of his party had to depose him and
install her as surrogate.
Her visit to the once venerable 60 Minutes
on CBS was no better and caused yet another
media scandal. A clip of the interview on Face
The Nation turned out to have a different
answer than the one aired on 60 that very evening.
When asked if she and the Biden administration had lost influence with the U.S. ally Israel,
Harris apparenbtly delivered a bowlful of classic
Kamala with romaine and crutons.
Well, Bill, the work that we have done has
resulted in a number of movements by Israel
that were very much prompted by, or a result of
many things, including our advocacy for what
needs to happen in the region.
Then, 60 Minutes apparently edited in a new,
more cogent answer before airing the sgment on
its Sunday night broadcast. Conservative media
and the Trump campaign have rightfully called
foul.
No doubt, the more America hears Kamala,
SEE HICKS ON PAGE 5
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.
Hundreds of Americans are dying in the devastation left by the hurricane. The incompetent Biden/Harris Administration, FEMA, that
prioritizes Democrat DEI over everything else
is nowhere to be found, instead having spent
all of its funds on resettling the 20 million illegals from around the globe that Biden- Harris
brought into this country.
Its a shame the new high school administration
is so spineless that instead of dealing with a
family with a known issue they punish all the
kids in the community at the football game by
putting up fences and attempting to restrict
them to the bleachers.
The lunatic policies of the demonic Nazi-like
Democrat cult are so indefensible that they can
never argue them honestly. If you oppose the
barbaric sexual mutilation of children, they call
Will new U.S. Farm Bill address processed foods, obesity?
Whatever your opinion of Robert F. Kennedy,
Jr., hes the first national candidate to platform
the issue of chronic disease in America. To
address this crisis, for children and adults alike,
our response should be bipartisan.
As A former member of the expert committee
that oversees the science for the U.S. Dietary
Guidelines, I can tell you that these chronic diseases are primarily driven by poor diet, and our
guidelines are part of the problem.
Published every five years by the Departments
of Health and Human Services (HHS) and
Agriculture (USDA), the guidelines represent
more than just suggestions. Theyre the nations
nutritional North Star.
But theyve led us astray. Today, over 70% of
American adults and one-fifth of children are
overweight or obese.
As members (and one of us chaired) the
Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, we
aimed for the highest quality reviews. Sadly,
those standards have deteriorated, leading to a
national nutrition policy that no longer reflects
the best or most current science.
The guidelines were controversial at the
start. In 1980, the National Academy of Sciences
derided the diets foundational studies as generally unimpressive.
Despite these concerns, the guidelines were
embraced by government officials for most of
the next four decades — even as the concerns of
skeptics grew louder.
In 2017, two landmark studies from the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering,
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
JANET KING, PHD., NUTRITION SCIENCES
and Medicine delivered a critical verdict: the
development process lacks scientific rigor and
transparency, leading to guidelines that were
not trustworthy. The reports made 11 concrete recommendations to improve rigor and
transparency in the guidelines process. Yet,
shockingly, follow-up evaluations in 2022 and
2023 revealed that the USDA had fully implemented none of them.
The result? Continued untrustworthy guidelines that continue to drive bigger waistlines
and poorer metabolic health.
Consider: Since the first guidelines were
published in 1980, weve been told to fear fat and
instead consume more than half of all calories as
carbohydrates.
This advice fundamentally misunderstands
metabolism. Chronic, excessive carbohydrate
consumption — especially refined grains and
added sugars — drives obesity, diabetes, heart
disease, and other metabolic disorders.
The guidelines also maintain an unfounded
hostility towards saturated fats, ignoring the
last decade of evidence challenging their link to
heart disease.
Following the guidelines, Americans have
increased grain calories by 28% since 1970,
while reducing red meat intake equally. Butter
and egg consumption dropped as vegetable oil
use surged 87%. Weve engineered a dietary
disaster, swapping wholesome, satiating foods
for processed carbohydrates that leave us hungry and sick.
Fortunately, hope is on the horizon thanks
to this years farm bill. This massive legislative
package, revisited every five years, could be the
key to unlocking a healthier future for America.
The bill proposes crucial reforms to the guideline-development process, demanding standardized, generally accepted evidence-based
review methods and requiring full disclosure
of potential conflicts of interest among committee members.
By mandating greater transparency and
adherence to rigorous scientific standards, we
can begin to rebuild trust in these crucial recommendations.
Its an opportunity to reclaim our health, one
meal at a time.
Janet C. King, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of
SEE KING ON PAGE 5
you anti LGBTQ for example. So all they can
do is fan unhinged hatred of Trump with violence inciting assertions based on either nothing or complete lies, and that actually describe
Democrat fascists themselves.
Ive seen people being interviewed that said
they were voting for Harris just because shes
a woman. Like its a novelty. Ice cream is
considered a novelty too but I wouldnt vote for
it either.
A relatively short time ago, borders were
secure, the world was at peace, gas and groceries were affordable, mortgage interest rates
were 2.5%, and the economic outlook was outstanding. Now look at the mess in less than 4
years – thanks in large part to Border Czar and
Vice President Kamala Harris. If youre one of
the handful of people in town with a Harris sign
or a Sharice Davids sign in your yard, you must
really hate your neighbors and your country.
Letters to the editor
County emergency
director responds to
firefighting question
The Anderson County Rural Fire
Department uses a fire fighting foam product
called Novacool UEF.
This product is considered one of the safest
foam products for firefighting. It is not considered hazardous to the environment and does
not pose a health risk to the firefighters.
We take the safety of our volunteers and the
people of Anderson County very seriously. We
are very aware of the health dangers of some
of the foam products of the past. After research
and study, we switched to this product.
We train continually on the latest and safest methods in firefighting. Thank you for the
question and anytime anyone has questions
about the Fire Department please contact me or
any of the County Station Chiefs.
Sincerely
Mark Locke, Director
Anderson County
Emergency Management and Fire
Contact your elected federal leadership:
3rd Dist. Congressman
Sharice Davids
1541 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2865
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(202) 224-6521
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
With a U.S. Secret Service like this, who needs enemies? 12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
If this is what the Secret Service has become,
its a wonder that something worse than Butler,
Pennsylvania, hasnt already happened. That
event was terrible enough, with one rally-goer
killed and Donald Trump coming within an
inch of losing his life. If Trump hadnt turned
his head at the right moment, Butler would have
become one of the most notorious locations in
American history and wed be living in a different world.
At the time, the Secret Services failure
seemed unfathomable, and none of the revelations since — set out in a report by the Senate
Homeland Security Committee — make it any
better. Barney Fife was better organized and
more accountable.
The Secret Service is given responsibility
for avoiding a calamity that would traumatize
the nation and derange its politics for years,
perhaps decades, to come. Its competence is a
matter of the utmost national consequence. Yet,
the agency was bumbling and slow-reacting,
a disaster waiting to happen. Surely, this sort
of ineptitude wouldnt be tolerated by Taylor
Swifts security detail.
The Secret Service, which we expect to be
run with a vigor and precision befitting its
mission, instead operates as though its a typical bureaucratic outfit housed within, say, the
Health Resources and Services Administration.
The Senate report relates multiple foreseeable
and preventable planning and operational failures, as an armed man was permitted to climb
atop the roof of the American Glass Research
building within 200 yards of where Trump was
speaking and get off eight shots.
The story of how it happened is muddled by
finger-pointing and confusion over who was in
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
charge. Secret Service advance agents didnt
know who was responsible for final decisions
and didnt know who determined the security
perimeter for the event. State and local law
enforcement were responsible for the AGR
building because it was outside the perimeter. But advance agents didnt share planning
documents with them, and didnt ask for the
operational plans of state and local law enforcement. Someone from Butler Emergency Services
warned during a walkthrough that local law
enforcement didnt have the manpower to lock
down the building.
Advance agents did suggest putting large
trucks or other heavy equipment between the
stage and buildings to block lines of sight, but
nothing came of the idea. The local officers and
Secret Service agents operated on separate radio
channels, and the only communications connection between the Secret Service and police communication centers was via cell phone. Some
agents radios had technical problems or didnt
work, while the counter unmanned aerial system was inoperative at the time the shooter
Thomas Matthew Crooks flew a drone over the
rally site in the afternoon.
Crooks fired his shots at 6:11 p.m. At 5:44
p.m., the Secret Service security room got word
that local police had spotted a suspicious person
with a rangefinder near the AGR building. This
should have been a five-alarm event, yet key
Secret Service personnel werent told that local
police had observed Crooks and lost track of
him.
Three minutes before Crooks fired, a local
law enforcement officer sent a radio alert that
someone was on the AGR roof, with the Secret
Service security room getting word a minute
after that.
When a Secret Service counter-sniper saw
local police running with their guns drawn
toward the AGR building, it didnt occur to him
to tell Trumps detail to get him off the stage. He
said the police running meant only an elevated threat level.
The explanation of one top Secret Service
officer — I cant put out fires that I dont know
exist — should never be acceptable. It could
have been worse, but thats not the standard.
Given the contents of the Senate report, its
not shocking that the Secret Service allowed
another would-be assassin to get close to Trump
just two months later. An agency that should
fade into the background because the quality
of its work can always be taken for granted is
instead a national embarrassment.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
9th Dist. Rep
Fred Gardner
State Capitol Room512-N
Topeka, KS 66612
Office: (785) 296-7451
fred.gardner@house.ks.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
Mystery bus trip continued – part 2
Our Mystery Bus trip continues.
Day 3: Friday 27 Sept. 24.
Up at 6:00 a.m., ate breakfast
and loaded the bus at 8:20 and
gone for the day. Our first stop
of the day was at the Faris
Gourmet Popcorn and Treats
store. In 2009 Jennifer Faris
was given an assignment for
her high school marketing
class to create a mock business
plan. Little did she know that
her plan would turn out to be
what it is today. Her company
now produces over 350 varieties of gourmet popcorn flavors and mixes. At Christmas
time they make over 40 special
flavors. Their latest contract
is making several different flavors of popcorn for the Green
Bay Packers football team. I
think we sampled practically
every flavor in the store.
At 9:30 a.m. our next stop was
at The Cathedral Church of St.
Paul the Apostle.
Rev. Patrick Perkins led us
on a full tour of this beautiful church. The 19th and 20th
Century German and American
wood carvings, stained glass
windows, marble statuary, and
oil paintings left us breathless.
There are 5,000 organ pipes
in this church. Rev. Perkins
played several hymns for us.
Today they only have around
100 parishioners in attendance.
They lost 40 souls during the
Covid epidemic. Before leaving
we were treated to coffee and a
Danish.
Our next event of the morning was picking up a tour guide
5
HISTORY
Cook 50th Anniversary
Kansas 4-H gears up for weekend
of community service Oct. 12-13
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
for over an hours tour of Fond
du Lac. She first gave us the
towns history and a short
briefing on Lake Winnebago.
Lake Winnebago was formed
by the glacier movement. It
is 32 miles long and 13 miles
wide. Its deepest spot is the
channel at 22 ft., the normal
depth ranges from 6 to 8 ft.
Several places we saw and were
told about as we traveled along
were: the Mercury Outboard
Motors plant, Northwest R/R
Depot once known as the R/R
Hub of America. At one time
it averaged 46 trains per day
and now there are no trains,
casket factory, carrot factory,
tooth pick factory and Marian
University campus grounds.
Our last tour before lunch
was thru Lake Side Park (beautiful) with a stop at their famous
lighthouse. It was 77 steps to
the top, needless to say Kay and
I didnt go up. It was here in
front of the lighthouse that we
had a group photo taken before
going to lunch.
(To be continued…)
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers. 30Sept2024
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2024 / SUBMITTED
Roger and Marlene (True)
Cook, rural LeRoy, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Saturday, October
19, 2024.
There will be an open house
celebration held at the New
Strawn Community Building,
319 Getz St., New Strawn,
Kansas from 2 p.m.- 4 p.m.
Roger and Marlene were
married at her parents house,
rural LeRoy on October 19,
1974.
Roger and Marlenes sons
are E.J. (Eugene) and Chris
Cook, Burlington; Neal and
Shanna Cook, Burlington; and
Michael Cook & Stephanie
Russell, Fairland, Indiana.
Grandchildren are Maycee
Hegwald, fianc Tyler Garbee,
Samantha Cook, fianc Dawson
Nolan, John Cook, Damon Cook,
girlfriend Rachel Trower and
Katelyn Cook. Step grandchildren are Ana Hernandez, Gabi
Hernandez, Cisco Hernandez,
fianc Dani Courbat, Lauryn
Wendte, and Danen Wendte.
KING…
FROM PAGE 4
Nutritional Sciences at the
University of California,
Berkeley, and former chair
of the Dietary Guidelines
Advisory Committee. Cheryl
Achterberg is a former Dean
at The Ohio State University
and was a member of the 2010
Dietary Guidelines Advisory
Committee. This piece originally ran in The Hill.
HICKS…
FROM PAGE 4
the more they realize the
Teamsters were right. But
dont underestimate the force
of cosmic hatred which Harris
and the Lords of the Left hold
for Donald Trump.
Some heinous rabbit is
about to come out of a hat, but
will it be doozy enough? ###
OPEN
FOR
SWANK…
By Pat Melgares, K-State
Research and Extension news
service
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Kansas
4-H will celebrate its long-standing commitment to community
service when members across
the state participate in 48
Hours of 4-H, Oct. 12-13.
Beth Hinshaw, a 4-H youth
development specialist in
the southeast region, said
the 11th annual event wraps
up National 4-H Week in the
United States.
In our (4-H) pledge, we say
we commit our hands to larger
service to my club, community
and world, Hinshaw said. 48
Hours of 4-H helps fulfill the
pledge that 4-H members make
every time they meet together.
48 Hours of 4-H is a project
that encourages clubs in the
state to plan a community service project. Its not a 48 hour
project, Hinshaw said, but
rather a project that you do
sometime during that 48 hour
timeframe.
We want the service to be
meaningful and we want it
to make a difference in their
community, she added. This
gives young people an opportunity to look at what is needed in
their community.
In the past, Hinshaw said
groups have been very creative
in how they have chosen to
help their community, including such things as:
Planting flowers and bulbs,
and cleaning up community
gardens and parks for community beautification.
Collecting non-perishable
food, hygiene items and pet
supplies for local agencies.
Partnering with community
events.
Showing appreciation to
local law enforcement, fire
department and 9/11 heroes.
Theyve found something to
do that will make a difference
in the community where they
live, Hinshaw said. Some
groups have long-time partners that they work with, and
others try new projects. One
local unit is making harvest
snacks for elevators to show
appreciation to farmers, and
another is re-painting the trash
cans at the fairgrounds with
4-H themes.
Hinshaw added that the
Rock Springs Ranch near
Junction City will host a statewide 48 Hours of 4-H project in
conjunction with the Live Well,
Lead Well health workshop on
Saturday, Oct. 12.
The service project will be
from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m., followed
by lunch and scheduled workshop. Registration is available
online and must be received by
Oct. 8.
In addition to asking local
media to cover their project, Hinshaw urges Kansas
4-H clubs to post pictures to
Instagram, Facebook and
Twitter with the hashtag,
#484H.
More information about 48
Hours of 4-H and how to register a project is available online.
Hinshaw also said that the
new 4-H year begins Oct. 1,
noting that 48 Hours of 4-H is
often an opportunity for those
considering membership to
see what 4-H is all about. More
information about 4-H, including how to get involved, is
available online, and from local
extension offices in Kansas.
as an outdoor sports park.
The park was considered
in the early 2000s for equestrian use by the Garnett Saddle
Club. It was thought to be a
possible home for the endangered Broad Headed Skink, a
tiny lizard, in 2018, but none of
the rare reptiles were reported
discovered there. Hay pastures
on the property net the county a small lease income, but
not worth the liability entailed
by the property, commission-
ers say. Primarily the park is
used by ATV enthusiasts, and
its steep hills, ravines and the
creek that bisects it is a safety
hazard, commissioners fear.
Campbell said the search
firm would charge $2,700 to
track down any Swank heirs.
Commission chairman Les
McGhee said he hoped that
fee could be assessed to the
heirs if they could be found in
exchange for the property.
FROM PAGE 1
return the acreage to the heirs,
and if they cant be found, to
eventually dispose of the land
through a county tax sale.
Particulars of the countys
agreement to accept the land 40
years ago forbade its outright
sale, but Campbell said the
county could pass a resolution
to no longer operate the parcel
as a park, which would default
it to any known or unknown
heirs. If property taxes went
unpaid, the county could fore-
close the property and sell it
at delinquent tax sale. The
mixture of pasture and timber
could sell for as much as $3,000$5,000 per acre, commissioners
estimated.
Were not making anything off it and its costing us
money, commission chairman
Les McGhee said. He said the
issue of safety and liability was
a consistent concern as well,
since the timbered areas of the
land were used by ATV riders
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LGGPR
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival
History of Lake Garnett, race track and the Revival
SCHEDULE
Friday, October 11th
6:00p Kickoff Dinner – @ Anderson County Community Building
– BBQ Dinner Inside The Community Building. If You Prefer
The Tailgate Style, You Are Welcome To Come In Grab Food
And Head Out To Your Tailgate Area. Also on display will be an
impressive collection of memorabilia from the original races.
Saturday, October 12th
6:30a – 8:00a Registration For Track Groups And Autocross @
The Garnett Recreation Center
7:00a Gates Open For Track Participants
8:00a Track Goes HOT- No Entry For Track Participants After
8am – Gates Open For Spectators
8:00a 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
– Combined Group A (60 Mph) / R (60 Mph – Novice Drivers, must
be accompanied by guardian or instructor)
– Group B (80 mph)
– Group C (100 mph)
– Group V (Prepared Vintage race cars; comp-licensed,
experienced drivers))
– Group E (Prepared Modern race cars; comp-licensed,
experienced drivers)
– Group H (Historic 50mph Passengers Allowed)
– Group MPH
2:15p All Group E & V Cars Going To The Car Show Need To Be
Staged On Grid For Parade Downtown.
6:30a – 9:00a Registration For Autocross @ The Garnett Recreation
Center
9:00a – 1:00p EKAE Autocross @ The Garnett Airport
11:30a – 2:00p Registration For Car Show @ Garnett Town Square
2:00p – 5:00p Gateway Classic Cars of KC Car Show @ Town Square
2:30p – 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)
Sunday, October 13th
6:30a – 8:00a Registration For Track Groups @ The Rec Center
7:00a Gates Open For Track Participants
8:00a Track Goes HOT- No Entry For Track Participants After
8am – Gates Open For Spectators
8:30a 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.
– Combined Group A (60 Mph) / R (60 Mph – Novice Drivers – Must
Be Accompanied By Guardian Or Instructor)
– 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 V (Prepared Vintage race cars; comp-licensed,
experienced drivers)
– Group E (Prepared Modern race cars; comp-licensed,
experienced drivers))
12:00p – 12:30p Lunch Break
12:40p 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 H (Historic – 50 Mph)
– Combined Group A (60 Mph) / R (60 Mph – Novice Drivers – Must
Be Accompanied By Guardian Or Instructor)
– Group B1 (80 Mph – Cars Pre 1975)
– Group B2 (80 Mph – Cars Post 1975)
– Group E (Prepared Modern race cars; comp-licensed,
experienced drivers)
– Group V ((Prepared Vintage race cars; comp-licensed,
experienced drivers)
– Group MPH
– Group C1 (100 Mph – Cars Pre 1975)
– Group MPH (100 Mph – Cars Post 1975)
Enjoy the Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival!
2×2 us for your next set of tires!
Remember
Wolken
601 South Oak, Garnett 785-448-3212
Watch Garnett racing
2×2
history come alive at the
D&M Mini Barn
Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival!
(785) 504-9625
24751 N Highway 169, Garnett
www.dmminibarns.com
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
2×3 Celebrate
Midwest
vintage metal!
Collision
Complete
automotive inspections and computer-
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, 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, 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 2:30 p.m. – 5 p.m.
Welcome to the Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival!
2×4
EKAE
ized estimates to repair dents, crushed doors, broken
lights and windows and more.
For more information click:
www.midwest-collision.com
Ethanol – Fueling A New Generation
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.
Realty
Well see you at the Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival this weekend!
2x3Check Out Our
Daily Specials!
Tradewinds
Friendly Service
Down-home Cooking
Great Atmosphere
Check us out
on Facebook!
2×2
Yutzy
Well see you
at the
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.
Come celebrate your racing legacy!
LANDSCAPE & DRIVEWAY ROCK MULCH SAND SOIL BOULDERS
(785) 242- 3070 3557 Old Highway 59 Ottawa
community
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
2024 Flywheelers Gas Engine & Tractor Show
CALENDAR
Thursday, October 10, 2024
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 11, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
4:00 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board
Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Lake Garnett Grand
Prix Revival Kickoff Dinner
Saturday, October 12, 2024
8:00 a.m. – Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival
Sunday, October 13, 2024
8:00 a.m. – Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival
Monday, October 14, 2024
8:00 a.m. – Movement Mondays Fitness Court
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
9:30 a.m. – American Legion
Auxiliary Meeting
12:00 p.m. – GACC Board Meeting
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Hot Yoga with Jenelle
6:00 p.m. – Library Board Meeting
7:00 p.m. – American Legion
Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Housing
Authority Advisory Board Mtg
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
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 16, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committee
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
Board Meeting
Thursday, October 17, 2024
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, October 18, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Sunday, October 20, 2024
9:00 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
Monday, October 21, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
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
6:00 p.m. – Hot Yoga with Jenelle
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
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 23, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, October 24, 2024
2:00 p.m. – Emergency Food
Assistance Program (Harvesters)
On October 4th and 5th, the 2024 Flywheelers Gas Engine & Tractor Show was in full
force at North Lake Park in Garnett. On Friday, over 500 local elementary students
enjoyed their Education Day. The many event goers enjoyed the nearly perfect weather,
exhibits, demonstrations and a record number of vendors and swap meet vendors.
Successful Anderson County Flywheelers event A unique experience for all ages
The Anderson County
Flywheelers hosted its third
annual Gas Engine and Tractor
Show on October 4-5, 2024. The
show included an Education
Day for school-age students,
a tractor parade both days,
culminating with an antique
tractor pull on Saturday. The
weather was great and the
event was deemed a great success by organizers.
There were over 60 registered tractor owners, representing over 80 tractors. There
were 5 gas engine owners representing almost 20 engines on
display. There were a record
number of food, craft and swap
meet vendors, over 30 in all.
The highlight of the event
perhaps was the Education Day
held on Friday. There were
526 students, school staff and
homeschool guardians that
attended. Eighteen members of
the Crest High School Future
Farmers of America (FFA)
assisted the Flywheelers by
leading the students in groups
to the various stations. Those
included two rope making stations, where students helped
make ropes and the teachers
were given them to take back to
their classrooms. The hands-on
corn shelling and corn grinding stations allowed students to
take a bag of ground corn home
to show their parents what
they did. The shingle making
station gave each school staff
person or guardian a shingle
branded with ACF brand.
A blacksmith shared his craft
with the kids. Tarry Miller
gave a talk on how honey is
made. The steam tractor and
a Minneapollis Moline Prairie
Tractor were crowd pleasers,
and gave the kids a widely participated Q&A session. There
was also a tractor tram that
gave rides.
Lunch for those participating in the ACF Education
Day was provided courtesy of
the Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Dentistry
Family Care
(785) 448-6988
131 E. 4th Garnett, Ks.
(785) 4483191
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
FAMILY-STYLE!
Every Sunday
Friday: Chicken fried steak
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
or chicken fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
Homemade
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
PAN-FRIED
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
CHICKEN
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
2×3
1-Stop
Sunday: Homemade
pan-fried chicken w/sides
an estimated 15 entries in the
pedal power tractor pull, while
the antique tractor pull garnered 126 hooks by a variety
of classic and antique tractors
in approximately 32 classes.
The participation in this years
tractor pull more than doubled
from the event in 2023.
The Anderson County
Flywheelers Gas Engine and
Tractor Show is a free admission, no vendor fee and no
participation fee, other than
the cost to enter the tractor
pull. This is made possible
only through the generosity of donations and sponsors,
including East Kansas Agri
Energy LLC, Wes Recycling, A
& L Builders, Modlin Fencing,
Tom Adams Construction,
East Central Kansas Refuse,
Maple Street Liquor, Wolken
Plumbing & Electric, Pizza
Hut, Victory Chevrolet/Ford,
General Repair & Supply, Inc.,
Power of the Past, and many
more.
The Anderson County
Flywheelers are also recipients of an educational matching grant through the Garnett
Community
Foundation.
Persons or businesses who
would like to donate for next
years event are encouraged to donate to the Garnett
Community Foundation and
mark your request to go to the
Anderson County Flywheelers.
A
few
official
2024
Flywheeler t-shirts and hats
are available for purchase with
proceeds helping for next years
event. Stop by the Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce to purchase.
Dja get
married yet?
Tell us about it. Wedding/
engagement notices are free
review@garnett-ks.com
Health Services
4×6.5 Health
D IDirectory
RECTORY
2×3
Patriots Bank
Our locations will not be
open on Monday, Oct. 14
due to the observance of
Columbus Day. We will
re-open Tuesday morning.
Revival. Homemade ice cream
cones made by a hit and miss
ice cream maker was a real hit,
sponsored by Modlin Fencing.
To bring the show full circle
was a talk by members of the
Anderson County Historical
Society with a display sharing
the history of how Garnetts
North Lake Park was constructed under the CCC/WPA
back in the 1930s. The display
shared unique information and
photos of the machinery and
horse power used to quarry
the stone from the lake bed
to create the dam, stadium,
restrooms and the swimming
pool. It also gave insight of the
men and women that worked
the project and their living and
working conditions.
The tractor parade both
days brought out the participation of 43 tractors each day to
take a lap around the 2.6-mile
road around the lake.
On Saturday, there were
We have
pizza!
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
Chiropractic
Feel
better! (785) 448-6590
427 S. Oak
Garnett
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
Eye Care
Pharmacy
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman
Chiropractic Physician
120 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422
M/W/F: 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
Hospice
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
School Physicals $35
DOT Physicals
National Registered &
Certified Medical Examiner
Drug/Alcohol tests available.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Notice
Your RIGHT to know,
guaranteed by Kansas Law.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
CRYSTAL METCALFE and JUSTIN
METCALFE,
Plaintiffs,
vs
KAY SHELLEY, a/k/a LINDA KAY SHELLEY;
HARRY S. FUNK III; CONNIE J. FUNK; FORD
MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY; FORD MOTOR
CREDIT COMPANY, LLC; the unknown spouses of them, and any of them; and the heirs,
administrators, executors, devisees, trustees,
creditors and assigns of such of them as are or
may be deceased; and, the unknown successors, assigns, creditors, receivers or other like
agents of such; and if such be a corporation
and said corporation or other company or entity,
or any successor be dormant, then the officers
and directors of any such corporate defendants
as have become or are dormant; and, with
respect to any such officers and directors as
may be married, the unknown spouses of
them and the heirs, administrators, executors,
devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of
such of them as are or may be deceased; and
the unknown guardians, conservators trustees
or other like representatives of such of the
defendants as are minors or are in any wise
under legal disability,
Defendants.
Case #AN-2024-CV-000027
NOTICE OF SUIT
The state of Kansas to each of the above
and within named defendants and to all other
persons who are or may be concerned:
You and each of you are hereby notified
that a petition has been filed in the abovenamed court by plaintiffs praying that they
be adjudged to be the owner in fee simple
absolute of the real estate described in said
petition; that the court require all of the defendants herein named, individually and and by
class, and each of them, to come into court and
disclose the precise nature of any claim which
they have, or which they may have, or which
they pretend to have in said real estate; that
the court proceed to determine such adverse
claims; and that plaintiffs title to said real
estate be quieted as against said defendants,
and that defendants and all persons claiming
by, through or under them, or any of them, be
forever barred and excluded from any estate or
interest, right, title, lien, claim or other estate in
or against said real estate; and for other relief
as more particularly specified in said petition.
You and each of you are hereby required to
plead to the petition on or before the 7th day of
November 2024, in the above court at Garnett,
Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and
decree will be entered in due course upon said
petition.
CRYSTAL METCALFE and
JUSTIN METCALFE
Plaintiffs
TERRY J. SOLANDER #7280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Plaintiffs
Nationstar Mortgage LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Aaron Buehne, et al.
Defendants,
sp26t3*
of Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the West Side
Entrance of the Anderson County Courthouse,
City of Garnett, County of Anderson of the
Anderson County, Courthouse, Kansas, on
October 31, 2024 at the time of 10:00 AM , the
following real estate:
THE NORTH HALF (N/2) OF LOTS ONE
(1) AND TWO (2) IN BLOCK SIXTYEIGHT (68) TO THE CITY OF GARNETT,
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS., Parcel ID
No. 0020993003013001000. Commonly known
as 603 S Walnut St, Garnett, KS 66032 (the
Property) MS212146
Case No.AN-2023-CV-000001
Court No.
Title to Real Estate Involved
Pursuant to K.S.A. 60
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court.
Anderson County Sheriff
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
By:
Victor B. Finkelstein, #13410
vfinkelstein@msfirm.com
8900 Indian Creek Parkway,
Suite 180
Overland Park, KS 66210
(913) 339-9132
(913) 339-9045 (fax)
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS ATTORNEYS
FOR Nationstar Mortgage LLC IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND
ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
oc10t3*
Statement of ownership, management and circulation
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Thursday, October 10, 2024.)
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
Anderson County – 2024 3rd Quarter Expense Report
(Published in The Anderson County Review, Thursday, October 10, 2024.)
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, October 10, 2024.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Notice of suit – Metcalfe vs Shelley, Funk, Etc.
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, September 26, 2024.)
Notice of Sale – 603 S Walnut, Garnett
1) Publication title: The Anderson County
Review
2) Publication number: 214200
3) Filing Date 10/7/24
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: The Anderson County
Review
14) Issue date for circulation data: 10/10/24
15) Extent and nature of circulation:
a.) Total number of copies (net press run):
1,800
b.) Paid circulation:
1) Mailed outside county paid subscriptions
on ps form 3541: Ave: 318, nearest filing date:
318
2) Mailed in-county paid subscriptions on
ps 3541: Ave: 764, nearest filing date: 764
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: 1,632, nearest publication date: 1,632
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
3) Fee or nominal rate copes 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: 1,757, nearest
publication date: 1,757
g.) Copies not distributed: Ave: 43, nearest
publication date: 43
h.) Total: Ave: 1,800, nearest publication
date: 1,800
i.) Percent paid: Ave: 93, nearest publication date: 93
16) Statement to be printed in publication of
10/10/24
17) /s/ Garold Dane Hicks, 10/07/24
List of Personal Property tax warrants
(First published in The Anderson County Review, Thursday, October 10, 2024.)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
CLASSIFIEDS
LOCAL
Pieces & Patches quilt guild minutes for September
The Pieces and Patches
Quilt Guild was called to order
by President Connie Hatch
on Thursday, September 26,
2024, at 9:30 a.m. The meeting was held at Kansas State
Extension Office Conference
Room. There were 24 members
in attendance. There were no
guests.
President Connie recognized
all of the winners from the
Anderson County Fair Quilt
Show and the Coffey County
Fair Quilt Show.
The Minutes from June
were approved as published.
Mary Parrott gave the treasurers report for September
26, 2024. A motion was made by
Bonnie Deiter and seconded by
Judy Stukey to accept the treasurers report. Motion passed.
President Connie Hatch
raised several topics.
First, the sadness at the loss
of Joleata Kent. Joleata had just
paid her membership dues and
members suggested donating
her $15.00 to the Kincaid Fair
in her memory. Judy Stukey
moved and Shirley Allen seconded. Motion passed. Shirley
Allen has volunteered to fill
out the year as Newsletter
Editor in Joleatas place.
Connie passed around the
signup sheet for this years
Committees. While the guild
year begins September 1, the
new committees duties begin
on January 1 of 2025, except
for the Christmas luncheon
committtee which plans the
December 2024 luncheon.
Connie invited members
to participate in a sew-in at
the Coffey County Library on
October 2 & 3. Starts at 8:30
AM, bring your own projects to
work on. Stay for the day or as
long as you want.
There were no corrections
to the August 22 minutes,
therefore they are approved as
published in the Newsletter.
Shirley Allen asked for confirmation that, if a member
does not have electronic access
to the Newsletter, she was to
print it and send it in regular
mail. All confirmed that was
true.
Connie reminded those of us
who havent paid our dues, to
do so as soon as possible.
Terri Couture reported that
the Miami County Quilt Guild
Show is September 28 10-4 and
September 29 11-3 at the Holy
Trinity School in Paola.
Donna Sutton reported that
the Mound City Historical
Society is having a non-judged
Quilt Show at the Mound City
Museum October 12 and 13.
It runs concurrent with the
Sugar Mound Festival. If you
wish to enter a quilt contact
Donna.
Committee Reports
Programs: Program chair
Jeannette Gadelman reported
that the October meeting will
be at the Garnett Library and
she will be doing a program on
Christmas projects. Todays
meeting will be a presentation
by Bonnie Deiter of the proposed updated By-Laws hoping
to get input from the membership. The November program
will be Lori Hoyt teaching
us about Crumb Quilting.
December meeting is our
Annual Christmas luncheon.
Jeanette announced the next
quilt retreat will be 2 nights/3
days February 10 – 12. The
retreat center is getting really
busy as other guilds are also
booking there in February so
Jeanette will have to do scheduling a year in advance from
now on. The only days available for the September retreat
are 3 nights/4 days September
29 October 2.
Quilters Hugs quilts: There
were a few see Show and Tell
below. Connie challenged us to
complete a Quilters Hug quilt
to donate at next months meeting.
Opportunity Quilt: Connie
Hatch will have the label for
signing next month. She asks
all those who worked on it to be
available for a group picture at
the November meeting.
Member Morale: Brenda
Futrell sent out cards for
birthdays, a sympathy card to
Joleatas family and thinking
of you cards to a few previous
members.
Block of the Month: Mary
Parrott reminded us that the
Block of the month needs to
have at least one barn block
and include an orphan block.
It can be any size. Show your
quilt top at the November
meeting.
Challenge: Bonnie Deiter
reminded us the Challenge
called New Do Doilie with
Ombre fabric is due at our
November meeting.
Christmas Program: Sign
up today.
Old Business: The By-Laws
proposal will be presented by
Bonnie Deiter at the end of the
meeting.
New Business: No new business.
Secret Sister Gifts
Mary Parrot received green
5 squares, a yard of green
fabric and a gift certificate.
Marlene Cook received several
items: small bag, ripper pin,
magnetic bowl, quilt markers,
car coaster, glowline tape and
mug rugs.
There was a gift for Clara
Ann Kempnich but she was not
at the meeting.
Show and Tell
Lori Hoyt Star Cross Log
Cabin Wall Hanging.
Ruth Theis a Quilt of
Valor (QOV) Star Block and a
potholder made with chicken
print fabric.
Donna Sutton a 3-Yard fabric quilt top from the pattern
Elemental.
Joyce Buckley A baby quilt
and a small coin purse.
Margaret Keen a purple
strip quilt.
Teri Couture a Laura
Heine whale collage made
with small scraps and steam-aseam2. The detail was amazing.
It was passed around the room
for closer examination.
Bonnie Deiter a QOV.
Shirley Allen her Block of
the Month Civil War Quilt.
Sandra Moffatt her
completed Signature Quilt
Challenge.
Jerry Lou Robinson using
a product called Applipops, she
appliqued perfect circles on tea
towels. There is a YouTube
video showing how to use
Applipops.
Carolyn Crupper Two
Quilters Hugs quilts, one with
a lighthouse and sailboats and
the other a strip quilt with butterfly applique.
Judy Stukey a picture of a
baby quilt with butterflies (she
had to mail it off before the
meeting.)
Terrie Gifford a Quilters
Hug quilt, the second in the
series from a quilt top donated
by Lyndas friend, whose mother had passed away. There is a
third one waiting to be quilted. These were made by taking
parts of the original queen size
quilt top apart to make smaller
quilts and adding borders.
Connie Hatch her gorgeous triple featured star quilt
from the online class by Cindy
Williams, the math whisper.
She also showed a QOV that
was pieced by Laverne Lendo
of Burlington and machine
quilted by Sharon Rich.
Mary Parrott her Shabby
Fabrics Block of the month
paper pieced wall hangings for
October, November, December
and January. Two strip quilts
and an Eastern Star Quilt with
Eastern Star Symbols.
Mary Cubit a quilt top with
pinks and purples and a tablecloth.
Not shown but announced
by Connie Hatch that Sharon
Rich took 3rd place at the State
Fair with her Grand Champion
quilt from the Anderson
County Fair. Congratulations
to Sharon!
Bonnie Deiter presented the proposed updates to
the By-Laws which were put
together by the committee.
There was much discussion
and good input by members.
The final version will be presented for a vote at a later
meeting
The meeting was adjourned
by Connie Hatch.
without a band or most of our
activities we still had almost
300 people, which is a little less
than half of our normal crowd,
show up to raise a glass, grab
dinner and join in an unforgettable Oktoberfest. We are so
grateful that people showed up
in less than ideal circumstances and make the best of a tough
night.
Our misfortune was fairly
small with everything happening in the world. People in
western North Carolina are
not worrying about the loss
of their crops, property and
roads, they are working to
save their neighbors and help
those in need. People with terminal illnesses are fighting for
their lives while securing for
the needs of their loved ones.
People with big and small problems are finding ways to make
their life and those around
them better.
Life is full of unpredictable
and often unpleasant circumstances. The only thing we can
truly control is our reaction.
You can choose to work toward
solutions instead of focusing
on everything that is going
wrong. You can choose kindness, grace, forgiveness and
optimism.
When there are storms in
your life, will you call the game
on account of rain or invite
friends to join you in the rain?
"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.
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
9
CALL CRYSTAL METCALFE
TO SELL YOUR HOME
C-(913) 579-5288
O-(816) 629-4494
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
MISCELLANEOUS
Call
(785) 448-3999
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
1x1property
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
source
Chris Cygan
785-418-5435
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
When veterinary care is
unavailable or unaffordable,
ask for Happy Jack animal
healthcare for cats, dogs, &
horses. At Tractor Supply
(www.happyjackinc.com)
Injured in an accident? Dont
Accept the insurance companys first offer. Many injured
parties are entitled to cash settlements in the $10,000s. Get a
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case is really worth. 100% Free
Evaluation. Call Now: 1-888-9201883
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
PUBLIC
AUCTION
Saturday, October 19 – 10 a.m. &
Sunday, October 20 – 12:30 p.m.
304 East 6th, LaHarpe, Kansas 66751
Seller: Sonny & Sandy Northcutt
Huge Vintage & Collectables, Antique Pedal Cars, Diecast Cars,
Train Set & Mini B Shriner Parade Car
Go to: www.allencountyauction.com
or www.kansasauctios.net for pictures & sale bill
Allen County Auction Service
(620) 365-3178
Auctioneers: Gerald Gray & Colton Heffern
Minutes recorded by
Terrie Gifford
What you can control
Jackie Mundt, Pratt County
farmer and rancher
Our local Oktoberfest celebration took place a few weeks
ago. This event is one of my
favorite, and one of my biggest volunteer commitments.
Everyone on the planning committee puts in a lot of time and
effort with the sole purpose of
raising money to better our
community, and we have a
great time doing it.
We have had great weather
over the years for the event and
bad weather was bound to hit
us at some point; this year it hit
us hard.
For the 10 days leading up
to Oktoberfest, a bit of anxiety
built as we watch rain dance
in and out of the weather forecast. We explored options for
moving the event but found
that wouldnt work with some
of our licensing. We decided to
move forward and hope for the
best.
About an hour before the
events start time law enforcement showed up to let us know
straight-line winds of 60-plus
miles per hour were headed
our way. Before the squad car
left the park, huge drops of rain
were hitting us and the wind
came up on us like a freight
train.
Our crew rushed into action
trying to salvage decorations
and other light objects. Then
some of our smaller tailgating
size tents for tickets and the
stage started to bend and break.
We dashed through the rain to
help the band get instruments
loaded back in their vehicle to
avoid further damage.
When there was no more
that could be done we all took
shelter under our only sturdy
tent and waited out the rest of
that down poor watching cascades of rain creating rivers
and lakes throughout the park.
It was clear the event would
not be what we had hoped. It
would have been easy to call
the event off and admit defeat
at this point.
However, the Oktoberfest
committee has a very clear
understanding that we make
our community by raising
money AND hosting a fun community event. We went into
crisis management mode and
talked through a lot of options
for salvaging the event before
settling on a plan.
When the first and high
winds stopped, we sent out
word to the community the
event would look different but
it would still happen. We invited people to join us for some
fun in the rain. Amazingly,
HELP…
FROM PAGE 1
communities dealing with
the aftermath of Hurricane
Helene. The foundation laid by
all the state task forces immediately after Hurricane Helene
will give the local communities
like Burnsville a solid base to
move forward.
Kansas Task Force 1 focused
their search and rescue efforts
in hilly, rough terrain. They
completed an extensive ground
search up the mountain to the
river. Part of their task was
to identify and mark targets
for further search and rescue
efforts. The team was tasked
with searching debris piles
from the flood waters and mud
slides.
They encountered some
natural wildlife during their
assignment, something we
usually only see in the zoo in
Kansas, a couple of large and
furry bears, the statement
said.
KS-TF1 continued to work
with the National Guard from
Texas and New York, along
with local sheriff agencies and
a few other states working at
the same command post.
In preparation of Hurricane
Milton, Kansas Task Force 2
was deployed on Sunday, Oct.
6, 2024, to Florida. Strategic
planning by KS-TF1, KS-TF2
and the Emergency Response
Division of the Kansas State
Fire Marshal took place to organize a rendezvous point where
the demobilizing KS-TF1 and
deploying KS-TF2 could meet
up, exchange personnel, equipment and assets, and debrief
the strategies that worked
well in the swift water search
and rescue efforts that originally took place in Florida.
KS-TF2 will be arriving at
their northern staging area
west of Jacksonville, Florida,
the morning of Tuesday, Oct. 8,
2024.
DID YOU
KNOW?
The Anderson
County Review is
the longest
continuously
operating
business in
Anderson County,
founded in 1865?
Dja get
married yet?
Tell us about it. Wedding/
engagement notices are free.
Email us at:
review@garnett-ks.com
(785) 448-3121
CONSIGNMENT & ESTATE AUCTION
Anderson County Fair Grounds Garnett, Kansas
(From Hwy 59 & Hwy 31 junction stop light east to Garnett lake swimming pool then north on Lake Rd.)
Saturday, October 19 10:00 a.m.
CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
00 Ford F350, 4 dr, DRW, 4wd, 7.3 diesel, w/
Branco spike bale bed, 1 owner
JW stock trailer, 28 ft, triple axel, new floor
Big Tex 40 ft flatbed trailer, tandem duals
06 WW 5×14 tandem bumper pull stock
trailer, no rust, good floor, no title
Flatbed tandem 6×20 trailer, metal floor, side
rails, new tires, no title
Utility trailer, 5×8, single axel, mesh floor,
tailgate
2 – Polaris Outlaw 90cc ATVs, both really
sharp
Feed King creep feeder, portable w/creep gates
Stockmaster creep feeder w/creep gates
JD 5 bottom plow
7 Bush Hog brush cutter
Blair stock trailer 6×20
Lots of new fishing equipment
ACC crappie stix
Daiwa Eliminator surf w/cabo 50 reel
Power Plus/MCM 1000 reel
Crappie Maxx, pole only
Extreme, pole only
Laser Lite speed spin w/reel
Magnum 80, 8 ft, rod only
Orvis Encounter, 9 ft, fly rod/reel
2 tables of NEW lures, tackle & fishing items
Accepting consignments until sale day.
See full listing & photos at
kansasauctions.net
JOHN WOLKEN ESTATE
06 New Holland TL100A, 2945 hours w/New
Holland 820 TL loader w/bucket bale spear
15 Polaris Ranger XP900, 9481 miles
99 Boss stock trailer 68×20, always cleaned
out & shedded
Ford 600 2T truck, 8×16 steel bed hoist w/
livestock ext
Miller Bobcat XT 250 Welder generator
w/torch set, bottles & gauges
New Holland 273 square baler twine
New Holland 258 & 260 hay rakes w/dolly hitch
2 pop-up sq bale loaders
4 wheel wagon w/metal bed
Ogden pasture drag harrow
Pull type disc, 12 ft
Cultipacker, 8 ft, 3 pt blade
JD 463 1 row lister
300 gal tank on 3 pt cart
3 fuel tanks on stands
4 Poly Tron feed bunks – 3 hay feeders
Chainlink fencing w/posts
Lots of misc pipe
Kubota RT705 rear tine tiller
JD X530 riding mower
Jonsered CS2245 chain saw – ECHO weedeater
Sanborn Blackmax air compressor
Delta drill press on stand
Lg shop fan – Shop or garden seat on cart
Trailer load – Hand & power tools – Wrenches
– Sockets – Log chains – Hoses – Lots Misc
Most everything 1-owner, shedded, well
taken care of, really nice & excellent shape
and condition.
Nothing Removed Until Settled For Terms: Cash Or Approved Check
Not Responsible For Theft Or Accidents
Announcements Day of Sale Take Precedence Over Printed Material
RATLIFF AUCTIONS
Ron Ratliff (785) 448-8200 Paul Hancock (620) 340-5692
Clerks: Deanna Wolken, Ruth Pracht, Christy Ratliff & Rhonda Frank
10
CLASSIFIEDS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
Need a place
to hang your hat?
Check out our
Real Estate Classifieds!
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Advertising Rates
Classified Rates:
Up to 20 Words …………………….$6.00
Each addtl word……………………..64
(Commercial) …………………………76
Class Display……………..$9.85/clm.in.
Run Of Press Rates:
Standard ROP ……………$9.00/clm.in.
Color……………………………………..$65
Pre-print inserts ……………….$158.40
Front Page
Masthead Banner (w/color) ……$300
Bottom Page (w/color)…………..$100
Statewide/multi-state ………… Quote
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
MISCELLANEOUS
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
Association @ 785-271-5304 tod
ay!
Paying top Ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Fertilization, weed control,
seeding, aeration and mosquito control. Call now for a
free quote. Ask about our first
application special! 1-877-5599593
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
MISCELLANEOUS
MUSIC
LAWN & GARDEN
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Users! A cheaper alternative to
high drugstore prices! 50 Pill
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insurance! A recent study
shows that a majority of people struggle to pay for health
coverage. Let us show you how
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for a no-obligation quote: 1-888519-3376 You will need to have
your zip code to connect to the
right provider.
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
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Bath & Shower Updates in
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professional installs. Senior
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frames? Need outside noise
reduction? New, energy efficient windows may be the
answer! Call for a consultation
& free quote today. 1-866-7665558 You will need to have your
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Aging
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New
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You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind
their work. Fast, free estimate.
Financing available. Call 1-877589-0093 Have zip code of property ready when calling!
Water Damage Cleanup &
Restoration: A small amount
of water can lead to major damage and mold growth in your
home. Our trusted professionals do complete repairs to protect your family and your
homes value! Call 24/7: 1-877586-6688. Have zip code of service location ready when you
call!
Piano tuning/repair – Paul
Benner, BA Piano Technology.
45 years, all types, players. (785)
691-8844.
my7tf
Little John Sherwood
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
Farm
& Greenhouse
1×1.5
lit785-835-7057
Hardy
tle john
Garden Mums
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
SERVICES
1×2
AD
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Monthly Specials
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2×2 jb construction
WANTED
City of Garnett, Kansas
City of Garnett, Kansas
The City Garnett is accepting applications for the position of Public Works Laborer. This position is responsible for repairing streets, alleys, sidewalks, and curbing.
This position may at times be called on to assist other
divisions of the Public Works Department, to include
distribution, collections, treatment, and refuse collection as well as assist other City Departments such as
Parks & Recreation, City Hall, and Code Enforcement.
For a complete job description and application, stop by
City Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett or visit
www.simplygarnett.com.
Salary based on qualifications, $15-$17.50/hr. The
position will remain open
until filled. EOE
Happiness is…Breakfast at the
VFW 9am-1pm Sunday, October
20th. Biscuits and gravy, Belgian
waffles, bacon, sausage and eggs.
oc10t2*
Happiness is… subscribing to
the Anderson County Review!
Call (785) 448-3121.
my19tf
Journeyman
Electrician
Journeyman electrician wanted.
Will train the right person.
Experience greatly appreciated.
Good benefits, great pay.
MD ELECTRIC
(913) 533-4076 OR
(913) 406-5375
2×3 j & j contractors
2×4 city of garnett utility plant
operator
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for
the position of Housing Authority Maintenance Worker.
This position performs a wide range of tasks including but
not limited to cleaning of buildings in all common areas,
maintaining equipment, mowing, snow and ice removal,
trash removal form buildings, as well as minor electrical, air
conditioning, and appliance repair. This position is an 8-hour
day shift, forty-hour workweek with occasional emergency
callouts as needed.
Public Works Laborer
Happiness is . . . Community
Breakfast, Saturday, October
12, 7am-9am, Lane Community
Building. Pancakes, Biscuits and
Gravy, French Toast, Scrambled
Eggs & Sausage Patties. Proceeds
go to Pottawatomie Township
Ruritan.
oc3t2*
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for
the position of Utility Plant Operator. Duties include the day
to day operations of the water treatment facility, as well as
the power plant but will start at the water treatment facility.
This position works a rotational day/evening shift of ten-hour
days in a forty-hour workweek. The ideal candidate will have
a high school diploma or GED and a Class I or II Kansas
Water License. Candidate must have the ability to obtain a
Class I or II Water Operator Certification through the State
of Kansas within three (3) years if they dont already have a
certification.
Housing Authority
Maintenance Worker
City of Garnett
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Having the
Reviews EagleEye News
Drone do aerial photography or
videography for your wedding,
special event, property survey,
promotional video, high-altitude equipment or building
inspection, etc. Real-time view
from up to 400 feet elevation, up
to nearly 1 mile range. Contact
the Anderson County Review
at (785) 448-3121 for more info.
oc11tfn
UTILITY PLANT OPERATOR
CITY OF GARNET, KS
Wanted – someone to reposition TV antenna. (785) 489-2218.
oc10t1*
For a complete job description and application, stop by City
Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or visit www.simplygarnett.
com. Competitive salary based upon qualifications and
excellent benefits package with a
starting wage of $16.00 – $20.00.
The position will remain open until
filled. EOE
Happiness is…shopping Garnett
Publishing for copy paper. Good
quality paper by the ream or
case. Stop by our office at 112 W.
6th today!
mc14tf
For a complete job description and application, stop by City
Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or visit www.simplygarnett.
com. Competitive salary
based upon qualifications and
excellent benefits package
with a starting wage of $18.00
– $20.00. The position will
remain open until filled.
www.simplygarnett.com
EOE
HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR
THE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT, Coffey County, KS, is accepting applications for one (1) Full-Time position of Heavy
Equipment Operator. Applications and Job descriptions may
be picked up and returned to the Coffey County Highway
Department at 1510 S. 6th Street, Burlington, KS. Starting
pay up to $21.05. Selected applicants will have the opportunity to proceed to a structured interview and if an applicant
is made a conditional offer of employment, he or she will
be asked to submit to a drug screening. Coffey County is an
Equal Opportunity Employer and a Veterans Preference Employer. Coffey County considers applicants for all positions
without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin,
age, the presence of a non-job-related medical condition or
disability, or any other legally protected status. Coffey County
will not refuse to hire a disabled applicant who is qualified to
perform the requirements of the job with reasonable accommodations. Applicants may request reasonable accommodations, during the application/
interview process.
Applications will be accepted
until the position is filled.
FALL
CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION
Now taking consignments
for Oct. 26, 2024 Sale
Bring your…
tractors farm equipment
vehicles tools boats,
ATVs livestock equipment, etc.
No Household, please
Sale will be held at
7th Street Grocery
22800 1700 Road Garnett, Ks.
2 miles west of Garnett on 7th Street
Yoder Auction
Service
Auctioneers:
Ben Yoder (785) 448-4419
Jr. Miller (620) 200-3007
James Yoder (620) 228-3548
Laverne Yoder (785) 204- 2700
* Consignments will need to be made before
5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 14 to be included in advertising.
11
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
Lady Lancers place 3 of top 8 at CH Invite
RICHMOND – It was another solid performance for the
Crest cross county team on
Thursday, October 3rd at the
Central Heights Invitational,
particularly by the girls who
finished with 3 of the top 8
overall.
Leading the charge was
Josie Walter with a time of
20:04, good for 3rd place.
Right behind Walter was
Peyton Schmidt (21:00), good
for 4th place and then Aubrey
Allen (21:39) finished in 8th.
Rounding out the Lady
Lancer runners was Kallei
Robb (24:02) who finished in
22nd.
For the boys the competition
was stiff but Gunner Ellington
(18:07) managed to finish inside
the top 20 with a 17th place finish.
The trio of Grady Allen
(19:57), Jimmy Ayers (19:57)
and Elijah Taylor (20:06) all finished within 10 seconds of each
other which was good for 33rd,
34th and 37th respectively.
Ryan West (21:10) was the
final runner, finishing in 48th.
Lancers lose shootout to Reno County HomeSchool
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-10-2024 / SUBMITTED
On Tuesday, the Anderson County Lady Bulldogs won the Pioneer League golf tournament in
Osawatomie. Pictured from left: Jadyn Parks, Ruth Burkdoll, Jaelyn Leyser, Marlee Hollon, Rylee Hill
and Coach Wiehl. They were led by Parks (5th), Hill (6th) and Hollon (10th). Burkdoll chipped in with a
15th place finish and Leyser finished 20th.
Lady Lancers volleyball
peaking at the right time
COLONY – As the volleyball
season winds down, the Crest
Lady Lancers have been on
a roll as of late winning 11
of their last 12 matches to
improve their season record
to 20-10.
Last Saturday, the Lancers
traveled to Uniontown and finished the day 3-1 with wins
over Northeast (25-20, 25-19),
Central Heights (25-17, 25-13),
SCC (25-17, 25-21) and suffered
their only loss to Galena (17-25,
15-25).
On Tuesday, the Lancers
swept matches at Marmaton
Valley against Yates Center
(25-17, 25-12) and Marmaton
Valley (25-10, 25-12).
In the 5 matches, Kaelin
Nilges led the team connecting
on 58 of 63 serves, good for a
92% success rate.
COLONY – Offense wasnt an
issue in the Crest Lancers home
game on Friday night against
Reno County Homechool
Sabres, but defensively they
didnt have an answer as the
Lancers lost the game 46-42.
The Sabres moved to 5-0
with the win but defense has
evidently been optional in
their games.
They are averaging a hefty
62.4 points per game while
AC football loses to Burlington
BURLINGTON – Burlington
opened up a commanding 21-0
first quarter lead and never
looked back en route to a
42-12 win at home against the
Anderson County Bulldogs last
Friday.
Anderson Countys first
score came on a 15 yard run by
Camryn Wilson late in the first
quarter to cut the deficit to 21-6.
Burlington would go on to
score 21 consecutive points
again before the Bulldogs tallied the last score, an 8 yard
run by Rigin Jasper to account
for the final points.
Wilson led the Bulldogs
with 81 yards rushing. Jasper
chipped in with 63 yards on the
ground.
Aidan Steele led the defense
with 10 tackles, followed by
Quinton Kings 9 tackles, 3
tackles for loss and 1 sack.
Burlington outgained the
Bulldogs 518-234 on the night.
Burlington averaged 10
yards per play as they ran 52
plays in the game.
Advertise. Call (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
allowing 46.4 per contest.
The loss dropped Crest to 3-2
just past the midpoint of the
season.
Crest won their first two
games 46-0 over Yates Center
and Northeast before suffering a 52-6 setback to Oswego.
The Lancers then rebounded to
knock off St. Paul to 54-8 before
the loss to Reno County.
2×5
Sonic
TDOTW
Top Dog
of the
Week!
Cody
Hammond
The Central Heights cross country runner broke a school and
Central Heights course record
with a time of 15:38.51, finishing 1st in last weeks event.
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
Crest
Fall
Homecoming
Friday, October 11
Crest v.
CENTRE-LOST SPRINGS
Homecoming Parade 2:30p.m.
Game begins at 7 p.m.
Coronation ceremony
following the game.
Front from left, Gentry McGhee, Kade Nilges, Gunner Ellington; back row, Cursten Allen, Delaney Ramsey and Karlee Boots. PHOTO COURTESY IOLA REGISTER/VICKIE MOSS
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12
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, October 10, 2024
LOCAL
Vikings XC have record setting Vikings win 3rd straight, down West Franklin
performance in home Invitational
RICHMOND – Theres no
place like home and we definitely felt the benefit of competing on our own course,
head coach Troy Prosser
stated of his Central Heights
Viking runners after they had
an impressive performance
last Thursday, October 3.
Cody Hammond set the
course and school records a
year ago at home and duplicated that feat again this year by
a massive margin by dropping
his course time from a 16:26 in
2023 to 15:38.51 in 2024. Connor
Burkdoll also ran a huge 24
second season best of 16:10
which now currently ranks
both as the #1 and #2 runners
in Class 2A.
Even though we werent
at full strength, the boys team
was able to top some excellent
competition from 3A, 4A and
6A schools to win the team
title with 34 points, Prosser
said.
The Burkdoll name has been
a staple for years at Central
Heights and Lily Burkdoll had
a breakout performance to
take 5th overall and set herself
up as the #15 ranked runner
in 2A. In fact, Ebony Hughes,
Melaney Chrisjohn, Caitlynn
Detwiler and Faith Coons
have positioned the girls to a
potential top 10 ranking with
several records and season
bests from all of them.
The JV Boys once again
dominated the awards with
Cash Miller and Ben Wuertz
leading the charge to a top 10
sweep and yet another perfect
score finish. They have earned
an impressive 51 medals in
five meets this season.
When speaking of his squad,
Prosser was happy with his
runners across all levels.
Prosser stated, They all
contributed to the 20 personal records and seven season
bests on the day which is absolutely incredible.
In the middle school results,
Makenzie Moon was the runner-up in a season best time
for 8th graders, Emery Hughes
and Elizabeth Meyer both set
records in the 7th grade race,
and the rest of the kids fought
extremely hard and showed
a great deal of toughness and
determination.
It makes me so proud to
see how much they are willing to push their limits and
the thing I liked more than
all else was seeing them start
using race strategies that we
talk about and work on in
practice, Prosser said. Its a
great step in the right direction for them and they will all
keep improving by leaps and
bounds as we move forward.
RICHMOND – The Central
Heights football team made it
3 wins in a row with a dominant 46-0 victory over West
Varsity Boys 5K (1st)
1st – Cody Hammond (15:38.51) – Franklin last Friday.
After opening the seaSchool Record
2nd – Connor Burkdoll (16:10.52) son with a pair of losses to
9th – Stetson Miller (17:09.55)
Jayhawk-Linn and Pleasanton,
10th – Christian McCord
the Vikings have now rattled
(17:27.55)
off wins over Uniontown,
12th – Josiah Meyer (17:36.34)
Bluestem and West Franklin
14th – Jotham Meyer (17:51.35 to improve their record to 3-2.
16th – Cooper Moore (18:05.18)
In the win on Friday night
Varsity Girls 5K (1st)
Lady Vikings win two to eek back above .500
Please dont eat the newspaper.
7th Street Grocery
FROM PAGE 1
tained Meyers assumption of
control did not follow the existing church charter and that
claims of a 2022 revision to
church bylaws granting him
that authority were not properly adopted.
That response also alleged
the doctrine of unclean
hands applied in the case a
legal principle that prevents a
party from receiving relief if
they have acted inequitably in
relation to the subject matter
of their claim. To prevail on
an unclean hands defense, the
6×10.5
LGGPR
Roulletts completions for the
104 yards and a touchdown.
Teegarden led the defense
with 8 tackles, along with
Chase Bones.
L Lopez led the defensive
with 2 sacks.
On special teams, the
Vikings struck paydirt as
Compton returned a West
Franklin punt 29 yards for a
touchdown.
5th – Lily Burkdoll (21:12.99)
10th – Ebony Hughes (21:52.32)
11th – Melaney Chrisjohn
(21:52.76)
21st – Caitlynn Detwiler (23:16.68)
RICHMOND – Last Saturday, heading into the final couple Coffey County (25-20, 24-26,
27th – Faith Coons (25:11.08)
25-22).
28th – Maya Acebron (25:34.00) the Central Heights Vikings week of the regular season.
At
the
Uniontown
On Wednesday, they had a
32nd – Arabella Dunbar (26:58.88) suffered a trio of setbacks compared to a lone win to drop Invitational on October 5th, rematch with Southern Coffey
JV Boys 5K (1st)
1st – Cash Miller (19:03.15)
their season record to 11-12.
the Vikings lost to Galena County and won again, this
2nd – Ben Wuertz (19:04.03)
Central Heights responded (9-25, 17-25), Crest (11-25, 25-27) time 25-17 & 25-23. The Vikings
3rd – Aidan Howland (19:55.60) though with a pair of victories and Uniontown (18-25, 20-25).
also knocked off 25-15 & 25-22.
4th – Russell Reed (19:58.47)
on Wednesday, October 9, to
Their lone win was a 3
5th – Royce Ulrich (20:06.53
improve their record to 13-12 set thriller against Southern
6th – Caleb Detwiler (20:09.43)
7th – Knox Cannady (20:17.37)
8th – Mathew Dunbar (20:38.71)
9th – Aydan Dunbar (20:51.60)
10th – Brooks Hamilton (21:20.81)
Read it instead.Subscribe today by calling (785) 448-3121 or email admin@garnett-ks.com.
17th – Matthew Wilt (22:58.44)
28th – Presten Holstine (24:39.64)
JV Girls 5K
Joi
22800 NW 1700 Rd Garnett
24th – Grace Tooley (37:46.79)
8th Grade Girls 2 Mile
(785) 204-1961
2nd – Makenzie Moon (13:50.07)
7th Grade Boys 2 Mile
28th- Rodney Macy (17:27.19)
7th Grade Girls 2 Mile
4th – Emery Hughes (14:03.07)
9th – Elizabeth Meyer (15:26.16)
17th – Mackenzie Macy (17:42.84)
19th – Rilya Lickteig (17:46.02)
20th – Ella Johnson (17:48.26)
LAWSUIT…
suffered. Meyer filed the suit
naming First Baptist Church as
the plaintiff. The suit asks for
unspecified financial damages
Meyer says he incurred when
the sale fell through.
According to arguments
in the lawsuit, Meyer either
assumed or was granted control of the church board and
attempted to sell the parsonage
against the will of other church
members and leaders.
In a June response to the
complaint asking for the cases
dismissal, the defendants main-
Brody Roullett accounted for 4
touchdowns.
Roullett rushed the ball
12 times for 182 yards and 3
touchdowns and also completed 8 of 12 passes for 104 yards
and another score.
Ben Teegarden also scored
3 times on the ground, garnering 93 yards on 9 carries in the
process.
Reed Compton was on
the receiving end of all 8 of
defendant must show that the
plaintiffs conduct was not in
good faith or was otherwise
inequitable, and entailed fraud,
unconscionability and bad
faith.
The church at the corner 5th
Avenue and Walnut Street so
far remains closed.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
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