Anderson County Review — October 30, 2012
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from October 30, 2012. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
OCTOBER 30, 2012
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Contents Copyright 2012 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Westphalia
Autumn Days
Flag football
at Central Heights
See Page 8A
See Page 1B
SINCE 1865 147th Year, No. 10
(785) 448-3121
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Wreck injures 3
Moran womans van drives left
of center, collides with 2
vehicles; fourth person unhurt
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY Three people were hospitalized
and a fourth escaped injury Sunday night
in a three-vehicle accident near 300 Road
and U.S. Highway 169 in Anderson County.
A Kansas Highway Patrol report said
30 year-old Mandy Gardner of Moran was
southbound about 6:30 p.m. Sunday when
her van crossed the center line and struck
a northbound pickup driven by 18 year-old
Shane Moore, also of Moran. Gardners
vehicle then struck another northbound
passenger car driven by Adam Barber, 22 of
Park City.
Barber and an occupant in his car, 55
year-old Charles Barr of Frisco, Texas,
suffered injuries and were transported to
Anderson County Hospital and life-flight
to KU Med Center, respectively. Moore was
uninjured in the incident. Gardner, the only
person involved not wearing a seat belt,
was ejected from her vehicle and was lifeflighted to Overland Park Regional Medical
Center for treatment.
Gardner was listed in critical condition Monday morning at Overland Park
Regional Medical Center. The other hospitals could not find reports on Barber and
Barr.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-30-2012 / Vickie Moss
Tara Calley casts a vote for Best Decorated Pumpkin at the Westphalia Autumn Days event Saturday, Oct.
27. See more photos on page 1B.
Election 2012
Federal Races
Sunday liquor
sales expanded
County approves sales
in unincorporated
areas for rural station
BY VICKIE MOSS
Your election guide:
Several offices at the local, state and
federal level will be up for grabs in the
general election Nov. 6. This week, the
focus is on state races. See previous
editions for local races (Oct. 16) and
state races (Oct. 23).
The U.S. presidential race between
Barack Obama and Mitt Romney is
expected to drive voters to the polls.
Although the focus is on the two candidates, there are others on the ballot
for president. They include: Reform
Party candidate Chuck Baldwin of
Kila, Mont., with running mate Joseph
Martin; and Libertarian candidate
Gary Johnson of El Prado, N.M., and
running mate James P. Gray.
Information for these profiles was
taken from candidate websites.
U.S. President
Barack Obama, D
President Obama was born in Hawaii
on August 4th, 1961, to a father from Kenya
and a mother from
Kansas. Growing up, he
was also raised by his
grandfather, who served
in Pattons army, and
his grandmother, who
worked her way up from
the secretarial pool to
become middle management at a local bank.
Obama
After working his way
through college with the
help of scholarships and student loans,
President Obama moved to Chicago, where
Mitt Romney, R
Mitt was born in Detroit on March 12,
1947. His mother, Lenore, gave up an acting career when she met
and married his father,
George. Mitts father
came from humble origins and never graduated
from college. He apprenticed as a lath and plaster carpenter and sold
aluminum paint before
beginning a career that
Romney
brought him to the head
of American Motors and
then the governorship of Michigan.
Mitt married his wife, Ann, in 1969. They
SEE OBAMA ON PAGE 6A
SEE ROMNEY ON PAGE 6A
U.S. House of Representatives
District 2
Tobias Schlingensiepen, D
My name is Tobias Schlingensiepen
(pronounced schlinginzeepen). I grew
up in Topeka, Kansas, and live there
today.
Im a pastor on leave from the
First Congregational
Church, a community
leader, and a chaplain
with the Topeka Police
Department. Im married to a wonderful
woman named Abigail,
and between us, we
have eight children, Schlingensiepen
aged 10 to 31.
As the son of immigrants, I believe in
Dennis Hawver, L
Ira Dennis Hawver is a Libertarian
running for U.S. House – District 2.
He was born May 6, 1943, at Topeka and
is a Christian.
Hawver
received
his law degree from
Washburn University
School of Law, 1974. He
received a bachelors
degree in History from
Washburn University,
Topeka, 1965.
He was a candiHawver
date for Kansas State
Attorney General, in
2010; a candidate, Governor of Kansas,
Lynn Jenkins, R
Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins, CPA,
was elected to the United States House of
Representatives on November 4, 2008.
Prior to serving in
Congress, Jenkins was
elected the 37th State
Treasurer of Kansas in
2002 and re-elected in
2006. Before her time as
state treasurer, Jenkins
served four years
in the Kansas State
Legislature. Jenkins
Jenkins
has been a Certified
Public
Accountant
(CPA) for over 20 years.
SEE SCHLINGENSIEPEN ON PAGE 6A
SEE HAWVER ON PAGE 6A
SEE JENKINS ON PAGE 6A
Advance voting available until Nov. 5
GARNETT – Advance voting already is
underway in Anderson County, with
nearly 400 people casting ballots before
the Nov. 6 election.
As of Monday morning, 389 advance
ballots had been received by the Anderson
County Clerks office. Of those, 146 were
cast at the office and the rest were mailed.
Advance voting is available until noon
Monday, Nov. 5, and can be done at the
clerks office in the courthouse.
Otherwise, voters can cast ballots the
traditional way. Polling places will be
open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov.
6.
A list of polling places follows:
Garnett City-Precinct I, Anderson
County Community Building, Garnett
Garnett City-Precinct II, Anderson
County Community Building, Garnett
Garnett City-Precinct III, Anderson
County Annex Building
Garnett City-Precinct IV, Anderson
County Annex Building
Indian Creek Township, Colony City
Hall, Colony
Jackson Township, Anderson County
Community Building
Lincoln Township, Welda Community
Building
Lone Elm Township, Selma/Kincaid
United Methodist Church, Kincaid
SEE POLLS ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A convenience
store that sits just outside the
city limits of Garnett soon will
be able to compete with other
towns in the county for Sunday
liquor sales.
Anderson County Commissioners voted Oct. 22 to allow
Sunday liquor sales in unincorporated areas of the county. Kansas prohibited Sunday
liquor sales until 2005, when the
law was changed to allow cities
and counties to make their own
rules on the issue. Greeley and
Princeton in Franklin County
have allowed liquor sales on
Sundays for several years. In
August, voters approved Sunday
liquor sales in Garnett.
But the new law in Garnett
doesnt apply to Sandras Quick
Stop at 24963 NE Hwy 169. The
convenience store and fueling
station sits just outside the city
limits. Owner Sandra Zook said
she asked county commissioners for the change to allow her
business to compete with other
convenience stores less than a
mile or two away.
I figured if everyone else
is selling on Sundays, I should
SEE LIQUOR ON PAGE 3A
Commission: Give
us a plan, not a sign
Plan to rehab welcome
signs put on hold for
road map from group
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Its a sign of the
times.
A difficult economic climate
means governments often must
prioritize spending. For the City
of Garnett, that includes prioritizing thousands of dollars for
signs.
A proposal to install new welcome signs at the north and
south ends of the city brought
a slew of questions from city
Proposed new welcome sign.
commissioners at their regular meeting Tuesday, Oct. 23. A
committee has been working on
the new signs as part of a project to use a new logo, new signs
and other elements to establish
a cohesive image or brand for
the city. The idea is to help visitors, and even residents, easily
SEE SIGNS ON PAGE 3A
City employees to get
free use of rec center
City follows hospital,
countys lead to add
membership benefit
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Garnett city
employees will get an extra
perk starting this week free
membership at the citys recreation center.
Garnett city commissioners followed in the footsteps
of Anderson County Hospital
and the Anderson County
Commission last week in voting for the added employee benefit. The hospital and county
commission both decided earlier this year to give employees free memberships to the
rec center as a way to improve
employee health. Anderson
County Hospital has launched
a campaign to make Anderson
County the healthiest county
SEE BENEFIT ON PAGE 3A
2A
NEWS
IN BRIEF
REC CENTER HALLOWEEN
Come and Trick or Treat at the
Garnett Recreation Center.
Halloween night until 8 PM.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY MEETS
Anderson County Historical Society
Dinner meeting November 8 at
6:30pm at the Welda Community
Building.
Wayne & Arlene
Ecclefield will host. Bring a covered dish and own table service.
S TAGS DUE
License plate renewals for all individuals whose last name begins
with S are due by Wednesday,
October 31st, at the Anderson
County Treasurers Office.
WOMENS BAZAAR
Garnett United Methodist Church
Womens Bazaar, Tuesday,
November 6. 8am 7pm, 2nd &
Oak. Frozen casseroles, meals
in a cup, cinnamon rolls, desserts,
crafts, embroidered tea towels, flea
market.
HOLIDAY CRAFT SHOW
St. Rose School Holiday Craft
Show and Bierock Sale, November
3rd. Interested vendors please call
(785) 304-2051 for information.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW
breakfast,
Saturday,
November 10, 7am 10am. Serving
biscuits and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage and eggs.
TEXAS HOLD EM
Texas Holdem at Garnett VFW
Post, Friday, November 2, 7pm.
FRIENDS OF NRA BANQUET
Anderson County Friends of the
NRA Banquet will be Saturday,
Nov. 3, at the Garnett Knights
of Columbus Hall, 1210 NE Golf
Course Road, Garnett. Doors
open at 5:30 p.m.; dinner at 7
p.m. Tickets in advance only. Call
Kevin Maloan, (785) 304-2422, or
stop by G-Trigg, 205 N. Maple St.,
Garnett.
ADVANCE VOTING AVAILABLE
Advance voting at the Anderson
County Clerks office ends at noon
Monday, Nov. 5.
CHURCH OPEN FOR PRAYER
The First Christian Church in
Garnett will open the doors of their
sanctuary every day from noon to 1
p.m. until Nov. 5. All are welcome
to come in for individual silent
prayer on these days. You can
stay for 10 minutes or for the whole
hour. Also, on voting day, Tuesday,
Nov. 6, the church sanctuary will
be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
FUNDS FOR PONDS
Pottawatomie Creek Watershed
Joint District No. 90 has cost-share
funds available for new livestock
ponds located within the watershed
boundaries of Anderson, Coffey
and Miami counties. Applications
will be taken at the Anderson
County Conservation District
Office, 111 N. Maple, Garnett KS
66032, until Nov. 9, 2012. For more
information, call (785) 448-6323
ext. 3.
SEVERE WEATHER ALERT
Anderson County residents who
want to get National Weather
Service severe weather warnings by phone via the countys
CodeRed system should register
online at www.andersoncountyks.
org, click Public safety/emergency
management, or pick up registration forms at the county annex,
Garnett City Hall, Garnett Library,
Welda Post office, Westphalia Coop, Greeley City Hall, Kincaid City
Hall or Colony City Hall. You must
be registered to receive the severe
weather warnings by landline or cell
phone. For more information contact AC Emergency Management
at (785) 448-6797.
HOUSING VOUCHERS
ECKAN opened the Housing
Choice Voucher waiting list on Oct.
1. Applications can be printed off
the web site at www.eckan.org,
requested by phone at 785-2427453 or picked up at the ECKAN
Anderson County Community
Center, located at 132 E. 5th
Street, Garnett, KS 66032, 785448-3670. Applications can be
faxed to 784-229-3103, mailed to
ECKAN Housing, P. O. Box 40,
Ottawa, KS 66067 or dropped off
at the local ECKAN community
center. Applications will be placed
on the waiting list based on the
date and time received.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
RECORD
Anderson County Board of
Commissioners October 15
Chairman Dudley R. Feuerborn called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Board of Commissioners to order at
9:00 a.m. on October 15 at the County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Dudley R. Feuerborn, Present: Eugene
Highberger, Present: James K. Johnson,
Present. The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous meeting were read. Correction made that
there has been no property taxes used
to make the bond payments on the jail.
Minutes approved as corrected.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor, met
with the commission. He has checked
on prices for purchasing a new riding mower for the shop. The present
Snapper has been out there for at least
20 years and he would like to replace
it. He does not want a zero turn mower
due to the ditches. He has found one
for $2,200 from Greeley Implement. He
would also like to purchase a new tractor mower. They have been using the
landfill tractor for the past several years.
If the tractor goes back to the landfill they
could mow their own property instead of
the road department taking the time to
mow it.
Family Medical Leave
Discussion was held on working part
time while on family medical leave. It
was questioned by the clerks office
whether those employees were eligible
to earn sick and vacation time if they
work any time while on family medical
leave. Commissioner Johnson moved
to not issue sick and vacation time
to employees on family medical leave
unless said employees return to full time
work. Motion died for lack of a second.
Decision tabled for one week.
GAPP
Discussion was held on a project
promoted by the Christian Church to
bring kids into the community next summer to assist handicap and low income
residents to work on their homes.
Commissioner Johnson moved to donate
$2,500 to GAPP out of the General
Fund. Commissioner Highberger seconded. Approved 3-0.
Department Head Meeting
Marvin
Grimes,
Emergency
Management Director, reported on the
gas detectors they are purchasing and
how they will be used. The recent rains
have cut down on fires. Sheriff Hupp
reported he is at 75% of his budget
and the jail will be over on their budget
due to the female prisoner. He feels
there are two vehicles that need to be
replaced due to mileage and will be
looking at his budget to see whether it
can be done now or wait until the 2013
budget, however, he would like to get
them purchased before the end of the
year. Jay Velvick, Deputy Appraiser and
Zoning Director, reported zoning has
slowed down which is giving him more
time with the appraisers office. Fred
Campbell, County Attorney, reported the
system they share with the district court
and it is running extremely slow. Phyllis
Gettler, County Clerk, reported inventories are still needed. They are in the process of setting mill levies and advance
voting begins on Wednesday. James
Campbell, County Counselor, reported
he has received the list of properties for
the tax sale and is preparing to send out
the notices. Jim Johnson reported we
did budget $5,000 for memberships to
the rec center for employees who wish
to use it. He is looking at allowing paying
for three visits per week and if the use
shows consistent they possibly paying
for yearly memberships in the future.
They are also looking into health screenings for the employees.
Sheriff Candidate
Vern Valentine requested the commission uphold county policy regarding
county employees campaigning during
working hours.
County Thefts
Gene Young informed the commission his property has been robbed and
advised them to keep as much property
as possible locked up.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 p.m.
LAND TRANSFERS
Justin D. Boots and Alicia M. Woods to
Kincaid Selma United Methodist Church,
Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and
12 in Block 6 in the City of Kincaid.
Secretary of Housing & Urban
Development Garnett to Heather L.
Burkdoll, Lot 21, and West 10 Lot 22,
Block 23, City of Garnett.
Tommy A. Tucker, Widower to Tommy
Albert Tucker Trustee and Tommy
Albert Tucker Revocable Trust, Lot 20
in Haydens Lakeview Estates Addition
(Rev 1977) to the City of Garnett
Clarence J. Schillig and Shirley A.
Schillig to Clarence J. Schillig Trustee,
Shirley A. Schillig Trustee, and Clarence
J. and Shirley A. Schillig Trust Dated 109-2012, SE4 24-21-17.
Sugar Creek Partners LLC to Jerry
Joseph Pachello and Denise Kaye
Pachello, containing part of but not all
of and beginning at point 96 rods North
of SE corner NE4 34-19-20, and beginning at NE corner NE4 34-19-20, and
beginning at point on North line of NE4
34-19-20, and beginning at center of
Pottawatomie Creek, (being the land in
said S2 SE4 of said Section 27 lying
south of said creek).
H & R Enterprises LLC to Gregory E.
Hughes and Deborah J. Hughes, Lots
1, 2, 3 and 4 in Block 5 in the supplement to Merrills Addition to the City of
Westphalia, less 20 off the South side of
Lot 4.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Wells Fargo Bank, NA vs. Kenneth D.
Brallier, Joyce A. Brallier, Mary Doe and
John Doe, asking $60,771.88.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Milburn F. Kelley, Jr. vs. Bobbi Nash,
petition for protection from abuse.
Tristen Blake Stinnett vs. Taygon
Stinnnet, petition for divorce.
Kelly R. Farhath vs. James Ray
Justice, petition for protection from
abuse.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Olathe Medical Center vs. Herbert
Robert Hayden, asking $740.77.
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country Mark
Garnett vs. Shannon Sandra Figgins,
asking $1,181.23.
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country Mark
Garnett vs. Mathew W. A. Smith, XI, asking $540.12.
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country Mark
Garnett vs. James Robert Atkeson, asking $1,020.52.
Central National Bank vs. Brandy L.
Mann, asking $522.95.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Capital One and (USA) N.A. vs.
Janeen A. Bailey, dismissed.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
James Ray Justice, aggravated
assault, use of a deadly weapon, possession of certain hallucinogenic and
possession of paraphernalia, appearance with counsel set for October 30 at
9:30 a.m.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Michael B. Woods, II, $143 fine.
Jessica B. Johnston, $167 fine.
Kevin J. Oakley, $179 fine.
Meghan Mahala Poss, $167 fine.
Dustin Levi Barnett, $271 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Branden Michael Dulin, $91 fine.
Colin B. West, child passenger safety
restraining systems & seat belts.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on October 16 of
theft of property or services of a Glow
Shift boost and vacuum valued at $119
and occurred on West 14th Avenue.
A report was made on October 16 of
theft of property or services of a 1992
Chevrolet Camaro hood valued at $300
and occurred on West 14th Avenue.
A report was made on October 18 of
aggravated assault, with deadly weapon,
and possession of certain hallucinogenic
drugs, of a Daisy Powerline 777 pellet
pistol, a silver blade black handle, a
silver & red metal pipe, used syringe
needles, and a tin snuff container, and
occurred on South Pine Street.
A report was made on October 24 of
burglary and theft of property or services
of an ATD toolbox valued at $2,200 and
occurred on North Catalpa Street.
Arrests
Rebecca Danner, Garnett, October
17, DWS and vehicle liability insurance.
James Justice, Shawnee, October
18, aggravated assault, with deadly
weapon, possession of certain hallucinogenic drugs, use/possession drug
paraphernalia, and domestic battery.
Benjamin Cockrell, Garnett, October
20, liquor purchase by minor.
ach clinic calendar
5×7
Brady Hiner, Garnett, October 20,
liquor purchase by minor.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on October 6 of
burglary and theft of property or services
of morphine sulfate valued at $100 and
occurred on East 6th Street, Colony.
A report was made on October 9 of
theft of property to a red Chevy truck
valued at $2,500 and occurred on NE
1830 Road.
A report was made on October 18
of aggravated violation of offender and
occurred on East 5th Avenue.
A report was made on October 19
of theft of property, lost or mislaid, and
criminal damage to property, injure/
defraud, to a chain link fence valued at
$200 and occurred on US 169 Highway,
Greeley.
A report was made on October 20 of
burglary, criminal damage to property,
and theft of property, lost or mislaid, of a
steel entry door and frame, a bolt latch/
lock with paddle, a deadbolt and $20 in
U.S. currency, all valued at $410, and
occurred on East 1st Street, Kincaid.
Accidents
An accident was reported on October
7 when a vehicle driven by Sheila A.
Bolling, 41, Iola, was traveling southbound on US-169 Highway at 900 Road
when the vehicle left the roadway and
struck a tree on the east side of the
road.
An accident was reported on October
16 when a vehicle driven by Cody D.
McCarty, 17, Rantoul, was traveling
westbound on 2350 Road when he
turned north on Norton Road, failing to
yield, he struck another vehicle driven by
Charles W. Davis, 77, of Garnett.
An accident was reported on October
19 when a vehicle driven by Dale A.
Silvey, 63, Kincaid, was traveling westbound on K-31 Highway at Vermont
Road when his vehicle struck a deer that
had entered the roadway.
An accident was reported on October
22 when a vehicle driven by Derrick
R. Kratzberg, 27, Paola, was traveling
southbound on Utah Road at 2100 Road
when he went through the intersection
and into a ditch. It is unclear how long
the vehicle and driver were in the ditch
before being found.
JAIL LOG
James Ray Justice, 52, Garnett,
October 18, domestic battery, aggravated assault, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of certain hallucinogenic drugs, bond set at $25,000.
Tina Marie Guernsey-Bishop-Prater,
35, Garnett, October 19, theft of property, lost/mislaid, no bond set.
Brady Ray Hiner, 19, Garnett, October
20, possession or consumption or sale
by minor, bond set at $500.
Benjamin David Cockrell, 18, Garnett,
possession or consumption of sale by
minor, bond set at $500.
Harvey Lee Burris, 40, Neosho Falls,
domestic battery and interference with
law enforcement officer, bond set at
$3,500.
Angela Kay Burris, 33, Neosho Falls,
October 21, domestic battery and interference with law enforcement officer,
bond set at $3,500.
Joshua Alan Leistra, 29, Garnett,
October 22, Franklin County Sheriff, failure to appear, bond set at $1,000.
October 21 for Anderson County, bond
set at $15,000.
Brian McAdam was booked into jail
on July 5 for Anderson County, awaiting
docket.
James Justice was booked into jail on
October 18 for Anderson County, bond
set at $25,000.
Michael Stevens was booked into jail
on June 29, 2011 for Anderson County,
hold for transfer D.O.C.
Mark Brewer was booked into jail
on October 4 for Anderson County, no
bond-trustee.
Connie McCormick was booked into
jail on March 28 for Anderson County for
12 months.
FARM-INS
Leroy Johnson was booked into jail
on August 31 as a hold for Douglas
County.
Dante Fields was booked into jail
on September 7 as a hold for Douglas
County.
Jeremiah Sliffe was booked into jail on
August 31 as a hold for Miami County.
AD
1×2
JAIL ROSTER
Justin White was booked into jail on
October 11 for El Paso County, Colorado,
Colorado hold.
Michael Vollmer was booked into
jail on October 13 for Garnett Police
Department, bond set at $1,500.
Harvey Burris was booked into jail on
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
bill craig
3×8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published October 30, 2012
Robert L. Brecheisen, age 51, of
Welda, died Tuesday, October 23,
2012, at his home.
He was born on September 2,
1961, in Garnett, to Paul K. and
Roberta Jean (Smith) Brecheisen.
He was a member of the National
Guard 127th Field Artillery Unit in
Ottawa.
He was preceded in death by his
father, Paul Brecheisen, and his
sister, Sara Brecheisen.
Survivors include a son, Arron
Hayes of Greeley, Colorado;
two daughters, Treza Hayes of
Humboldt; Roxann Brecheisen
of Garnett; a granddaughter; his
mother, Roberta Biddle of Leroy;
two brothers, Randy Brecheisen of
San Antonio, Texas; Eddie Skaggs
of Neosho Falls, Kansas; two sisters
Sandy Perez of Humboldt, Kansas;
Susan Skaggs Boling of Leroy.
Funeral services were Saturday,
October 27, 2012 at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel in
Garnett. Burial followed in the
Welda Cemetery in Welda.
NILGES
August 1, 1924-October 23, 2012
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published October 30, 2012
Fred J. Nilges, 88, passed away
at his home in Emporia, Kansas
Tuesday morning, October 23, 2012.
Fred was born in Rural Garnett,
Kansas on August 1, 1924, the son
of Samuel and Mary (Peine) Nilges.
He married Lorrine Armstrong at
Emporia, Kansas on February 26,
1972. She died November 5, 2006.
Surviving family members
include his step-daughter, June
Delgado, and her husband, Larry,
Emporia, adopted son, Mark Wayne
Nilges, address unavailable, SonIn-Law, Jim Spillman, Eureka,
Kansas, brother, Bernie Nilges,
Iola, Kansas, six grandchildren,
and 10 great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Step-son, Randy Swanson,
Step-daughter, Janis Spillman, as
well as three brothers and four sisters.
Mr. Nilges was a truck driver for
35 years, and owned and operated
Fred J. Nilges Trucking until he
retired in 1988. He also owned and
operated Freds Tavern in Emporia
for 27 years, retiring from there in
1989.
Graveside services were at the
Number Eight Cemetery, east of
Madison, on Friday, October 26.
The service was conducted by Rev.
Kenneth Baker, United Methodist
Church, Eureka.
BOOTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published October 30, 2012
PECK- James Harry Boots, 76,
retired Boeing Manager, passed
away Tuesday, October 2, 2012.
Private family services have
been held.
He was preceded in death by
his parents and sister, Norma
Benjamin.
Survived by wife JoAnne; sons
James (Aileen) Boots and Richard
(Darla) Boots; brother Robert
Boots; sisters Wilma Berggren and
Patricia Horner; grandchildren
Rachel (Kyle) Mills, Amanda (Chad)
Ewertz, James Boots, Andrew Bain,
Laura Boots; great-grandchildren
Alec and Luke Ewertz.
View tributes at smithfamilymortuaries.com.
SIMPSON
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published October 30, 2012
Travis Simpson, age 32, of
Bolivar, Missouri, died Sunday,
October 21, 2012, at Bolivar, Mo.
Graveside services were
Saturday, October 27, 2012, at the
Garnett Cemetery in Garnett.
BENEFIT…
FROM PAGE 1A
in Kansas.
The hospital offers its
employees the chance to visit
the rec center three times a
week. The rec center keeps
track of visits, and bills the hospital at the end of the month.
Visits by hospital employees are
billed at the regular daily rate
of $2. In September, the hospital
was charged $202; in August, the
hospital was charged $98.
Anderson
County
Commissioners allocated $5,000
next year for rec center memberships, but did not lay out a
plan for how employees could
use the center. The county may
follow the hospitals model.
By offering free memberships to employees, the City
of Garnett technically wont
have to pay itself anything
because it also owns the rec
center. However, its important
to keep the rec center self-sufficient with membership fees,
city manager Joyce Martin told
city commissioners. She plans
to shift money from the citys
salary fund to the rec center to
cover the cost of memberships.
About 10 city employees currently have memberships at the
rec center, and the city may
lose that money. About half of
the citys employees said they
would take advantage of free
memberships, Martin said.
Mayor Greg Gwin was concerned the city might face significant lost revenue, especially
since commissioners didnt
plan for the benefit in the 2013
budget.
Its about the cheapest benefit we can offer, commissioner Preston Peine said. It may
have two-fold benefits: increase
loyalty among employees and
improve the health of employees. We have very little risk as a
city.
After some discussion about
how the city would manage the
program, commissioners voted
to follow the hospitals model
starting Nov. 1. After about
three months, they will take
another look at the program
and see if adjustments should
be made.
gun guys?
2×5
Fire damages rural home
LIQUOR…
BRECHEISEN
September 2, 1961-October 23, 2012
FROM PAGE 1A
too, Zook said.
Most of the business at
Sandras Quick Stop comes
from out-of-town traffic because
the station sits at the junction
of U.S. 59 and U.S. 169 south of
Garnett. Zook said she didnt
expect the change to result in
significantly more sales.
Its more of a convenience
for people and for us, instead of
turning them away and having
them go down the road, Zook
said.
The law will go into effect
in late December unless someone files a petition protesting
the change. If such a petition
is filed, county commissioners must bring the question
to a public vote. Thats what
happened when Garnett city
commissioners voted to allow
Sunday sales, but voters upheld
their decision by a vote of 287265.
The change will allow Sunday
liquor sales only in unincorporated areas of Anderson County.
Incorporated city jurisdictions
– such as Colony, Westphalia
and Kincaid – still retain the
power to decide whether or not
to allow Sunday liquor sales.
Sandras Quick Stop is the
only business presently that
will be affected by the change,
according to county clerk
Phyllis Gettler.
A resolution detailing the
change is published on Page
7A.
SIGNS…
FROM PAGE 1A
find their way around the city
and to attractions in the area
and to offer up an attractive,
marketable look to the citys
presentation of itself. Garnett
City Manager Joyce Martin has
been providing regular updates
to commissioners, but when
branding committee member
Scott Rogers appeared at the
meeting to ask for money to buy
the new welcome signs, he
faced an onslaught of questions
from commissioners.
Why install new welcome
signs when the city has other
signage needs? Whats the
schedule to install other signs?
How much will it cost? When
will they need the money? Is
anyone else going to help pay?
My concern is that these
same groups are going to come
up to us several times and ask
for money and I dont see a
game plan, commissioner
Preston Peine said.
The citys branding committee, along with tourism and economic development groups, are
looking at four different types
of signs:
Welcome signs: The city has
two welcome signs on U.S. 59.
One is at the north end near the
new Garnett Elementary School.
The other is near Crystal Lake,
also known as the South Lake.
Updating those signs with the
citys new logo will cost $7,000.
Rogers estimated the welcome
signs will be the least expensive
part of the project because the
framework for the signs already
exists.
U.S. 169 corridor: Signs
would be placed at streets that
lead from U.S. 169 to the city, or
one each at Park Road, Fourth
Avenue and Sixth Avenue. The
signs would include attractions
that could be found in that area,
and each sign would be about 9
feet tall. Such signs are important because U.S. 169 does not
pass through the city, so people
may not realize what is there,
Rogers said.
Way-finding signs: Inside the
city limits, signs would point to
various attractions, including
lakes, trails and essential places
like the hospital. Grants likely
are available for these signs
because they help people find
healthful attractions like walking trails.
Street signs: Federal mandates eventually will require
the city to install new street
signs. City commissioners
appeared most concerned with
this type of sign because it will
be required, although Martin
said it is not clear when the
deadline will be for this project.
Commissioner Dan Morgan
said he would like to see a road
map for the signs. He said he
agreed that street signs and wayfinding are more important, but
could be more expensive.
Peine criticized other groups
with a stake in the project but
who did not attend the meeting
to explain their position.
I think this sign is important, but it must not be as important as we thought because two
other committees didnt show
up, he said. Im concerned its
not the right project at the right
time.
Mayor Greg Gwin suggested
Rogers and his fellow committee members work on developing a timeline and budget.
I know you guys put a lot
of effort into this. I dont want
to discourage you. I just think
youll get more bang for your
buck if you go a different path,
Gwin said.
Management Director Marvin
Grimes. The house is on NE
Scott Road.
Grimes said he was not sure
if insurance adjusters would
deem the house as destroyed or
if it could be salvaged. The fire
was believed to be caused by a
propane leak. A family member
said the couple was assisted by
the local Red Cross and had
been temporarily relocated to
another local residence pending
a determination on salvaging or
rebuilding at the site.
POLLS…
FROM PAGE 1A
Monroe
Township,
Anderson County Community
Building
North Rich Township,
Selma/Kincaid
United
Methodist Church, Kincaid
Ozark Township, Colony
City Hall, Colony
Putnam Township, St.
Johns Hall, Greeley
Reeder Township, St.
Teresas Church Basement,
Westphalia
Rich Township, Selma/
Kincaid United Methodist
Church, Kincaid
Walker Township, St. Johns
Hall, Greeley
Washington Township,
Welda Community Building,
Welda
Welda Township, Welda
Community Building, Welda
Westphalia Township, St.
Teresas Church Basement,
Westphalia
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
YOUR LIFE IS A STORY.
garnett
monument
TELL
IT WELL.
2×2
Garnett Monument
& Glass
126 West Fifth Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-6622
Todd Barnes
Remember.
Forever.
amendment change
3×7
ent guide
4×5
GREELEY A propane leak is to
blame for a late night fire at the
rural Greeley home of Dennis
and Joyce Hastert Sunday, Oct.
21.
No one was seriously injured
although Joyce Hastert was
treated for smoke inhalation
and released.
The fire was reported at
about 11:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21.
Most of the damage was contained to the back of the house
on the north side, according to
Anderson County Emergency
Dining & Entertainment
3A
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Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
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EDITORIAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
What the
bosses say
The Anderson County Reviews
Phone Forum
Record your comments on the topic of
your choice at (785) 448-2500, press
option 1. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be
edited for publication or omitted.
Company chiefs paint
reality backdrop to
presidential election
If this election year is about the
economy, and if the economy is about
jobs, and if jobs are about the people
who do the hiring, then the two presidential candidates and especially those
running for U.S. Senate and Congress
should pay heed to what the nations
top hirers are
saying.
EDITORIAL
And what the
head honchos
of more than 80
major U.S. companies are saying
is that theyre
afraid to hire
anybody until
U.S. leadership
reduces the federal deficit.
Its not a new
by Dane Hicks,
message, but its
PUBLISHER
one that may
have been obscured in this ridiculous
campaign season filled with too much
crowing about legitimate rape and
Special Olympics bowling performances and too little about the rocks our
national ship is about to hit. The celebrated fiscal cliff of forced austerity
measures is just the beginning, and the
nations major employers are trying to
get the point across that theyre not hiring anybody until theyre convinced the
nations management is worth investing in.
What it really comes down to is
if we still have the political will to be
a great country, said Dave Cote, the
CEO of Honeywell International. What
hes talking about is the theme of the
80-plus head cheeses which they outlined in a joint statement last week:
That the U.S. is going to have to reduce
its deficit through tax increases and
spending cuts even to sacred cows
like Medicare and Medicaid if major
hirers and investors are going to feel
secure enough to invest dollars in more
hiring.
Willpower is something were effusive about during campaign seasons
but something that, without fail, neither Democrats nor Republicans in the
presidency nor the congress for decades
has been willing to put into practice.
And the reason for that is simple as
well: Political will, in this day of blame
warfare in American society in which
every special interest sustains itself by
firing media salvos asserting their own
victimhood, is in effect political suicide.
No congressman or president will survive more than a term if national leadership, as the heads of these companies
have now jointly proclaimed, do what
has to be done. The special interest firing squad is simply too effective.
The bosses making the statement
are heads of companies you know:
Microsoft, JP Morgan Chase, Time
Warner Cable, Merck & Co., General
Electric, Dow Chemical, Verizon, Bank
of America Corp., Aetna, and others.
The statement and the source is
important, because suits though they
may be, they are responsible for delivering value to ownership and stockholders and they can only do that if they
can earn profits. If theyre convinced
theres money to be made, theyll hire
the people to do it but massive federal
debt has shaken our economy to its
footings, and people simply wont circulate their money when theyre scared.
We can only hope Americans, for
their own good, will begin to repeat the
theme, and that when the smoke clears
next week the winners will listen.
I know everybodys very excited about
the decrease in gas prices recently.
Kind of funny that it happened about
two weeks from the election. Kind of
makes a person go hmmm.
Clean appearance of a store outside
and inside and friendly employees
makes a big difference whether you
want to shop there or not.
Maybe someone at city hall can
explain this one to me and Im sure
there are other people around here
who want to know as well. Weve
been doing this so-called branding
project, we apparently have a slogan
which either no one can remember or
theyve given up on already because
no one seems to remember what it is
and now were going to be putting up
signs to direct people to, what? There
arent enough things in Garnett to
have to need signs to that you cant
find on your own, if you wander
around youll probably bump into
the lake or the park before you bump
into the sign that tells you how to get
there. Meanwhile there are streets
and sidewalks in town that you can
break a leg on. Priorities, people, priorities.
Schools for contraception
BY RICH LOWRY
NATIONAL REVIEW
New York Citys public schools do a
poor job educating kids. In fairness, though,
thats not their expertise. What they excel at
is giving out contraceptives.
If there were international comparisons
of contraception access at schools, instead of
math and reading scores, Singapore would
have to look in envy at the achievements of
New York City and wonder: What can we do
to catch up?
New Yorks schools are
outdoing themselves with
their latest pedagogical
initiative, the Orwelliannamed CATCH program,
for Connecting Adolescents
to Comprehensive Health.
Comprehensive health,
Lowry
of course, means only one
particular kind of health,
the equally euphemistic reproductive
health.
The schools already provide free condoms. Soon enough, the mere distribution
of condoms will seem the hallmark of a
bygone, more innocent era, like something
from the plot of a Happy Days episode.
The program to give out morning-after
pills — and other oral and injected contraceptives — is now up and running in 13 schools.
Parents have to explicitly choose to opt out
of the program, which, as any behavioral
economist will tell you, strongly tips the balance toward its passive acceptance.
The morning-after pill, or Plan B, is a
contraceptive, but it is possible — although
disputed — that it acts like an abortifacient
as well. Its distribution is another step down
the slippery slope toward the provision of
abortion in the schools. If that sounds outlandish, just wait.
There can be no doubt the direction that
the Big Apples latitudinarian educrats want
to go. According to Greg Pfundstein of the
pro-life Chiaroscuro Foundation, one of the
homework exercises in a proposed New
York City sex-education curriculum that
became controversial last year included a
visit or a call to a clinic to find out its
hours, what services it provides and its confidentiality policy.
It can be harder to get an aspirin in some
schools around the country than it is now
to get Plan B in New York. The schools can
give a synthetic female hormone to a girl as
young as 14 without so much as a text message to her mom. Such is the perverse value
system of New Yorks nanny state that the
program ran with no notice to the public -ho-hum — until the New York Post broke the
story.
Surely, many parents of the kids in the
affected schools arent involved enough in
their childrens lives, and the schools cant
substitute for the discipline and values that
kids arent getting at home. But that doesnt
mean schools should keep from parents that
their daughters are having unprotected sex
and might be pregnant. They shouldnt be
the friend and the enabler of the sexually
active teenager, either.
The schools should do everything they
can to create an environment of rigor, with
an overwhelming emphasis on future-oriented behavior. Instead, the New York City
schools operate on the same mores as a
Planned Parenthood clinic. Parents are a
nuisance. No questions are asked. And teenage sex, which is inherently casual sex, is
implicitly encouraged.
But dont worry. It will only get worse.
Hey, how come we dont ever have a
haunted house in Garnett? How come
we have to travel miles away to go to a
haunted house at Halloween?
Surprised after such a hard summer
that were having such a pretty fall.
Really enjoying it.
I am calling to ask why it is possible
for law enforcement in this town to
pull people over for not wearing seatbelts, but yet allow their themselves
to not wear seatbelts when on duty
or allow their family members to not
wear seatbelts and get away with it.
Thank you.
Contact your legislator
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
President Barack H. Obama
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.,
Washington, D.C., 20500
(202) 456-1414
Fax (202) 456-2461
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Only those who will risk going too far can
possibly find out how far one can go.
T.S. Eliot
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
LOCAL
150 years ago: Prairie fire kills 4 family members
BY LINDA MCNEIL
Special to THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
One hundred and fifty
years ago on October 30, 1862,
there was a tragic disaster in
Anderson County, Kansas,
which has left many unanswered questions and mysteries.
A prairie fire, fed by tenacious winds blowing through
the tall grasses, overtook some
travelers, on what may have
been called the old Ottawa
road. They were in the process of moving from Anderson
County, Kansas, to Eudora,
Kansas, near Lawrence. Those
who lost their lives were Josiah
and Mary Ann Kellerman and
their two small sons. The three
older children in the family
Mary Alice, aged 11, John 8, and
Daniel 6, were on horseback
herding cattle and managed
to reach the safety of plowed
ground. (Farmers in those days
plowed barriers around their
homes, barns and haystacks,
in efforts to be safe from such
fires.) Ed Fay, an historian, was
an early resident of northwest
Anderson county. In a feature
article in a 1918 issue of The
Garnett Review, he stated that,
flames from those fires travelled faster than a horse could
run. In another story it was
learned that there had been a
drought of 18 months during
the years 1861 and 1862.
News in those days did make
the rounds. The Wyandotte
(Kansas) Commercial Gazette
on 15 November, 1862, page 1,
reported an exaggerated version of the story. It stated, a
man and his wife and family
consisting of six children, died
in Anderson County in a prairie fire. The following week,
November 22, 1862, less than
a month following the tragedy, James Means was quoted
in the Oskaloosa (Kansas)
Independent on pages 2 & 3.
His report was that on the
30th of October, four persons
were burned to death within a
mile and half of my residence.
That news stated that Means
was, postmaster at Cresco.
This sad news also made
its way back to Pennsylvania
where Josiah and Mary Ann
were born, married, and began
to raise their family. The fire
was reported in the Democratic
Standard, Hollidaysburg, Pa.,
on Wednesday, November 26,
1862, citing an earlier story
in the Bedford Inquirer. In
this story, Josiah was cited as
Joseph Kellerman. Accounts
have not been found in news
in Andrew County, Missouri
where other relatives resided.
Having not found such news
does not mean there may not
have been such reports. It is
likely that all newspapers have
not survived, or that researchers just have not located such
papers.
Josiah was born about 1826
in Bedford County, PA. His
parents were John Kellerman
(1782-1844) and Dorothea
Kimberling his wife, both of
German parentage. Josiah probably married in the year 1848.
The 1850 Bedford County census enumeration shows Josiah
as age 24, wife Mary Ann, age
21. Josiah was a teamster and
miller and had real estate valued at $400.00 – a large amount
for those times. There were
no children listed, but Josiahs
widowed mother Dorothea
was a resident there as was
his younger sister, Susan Mary,
aged 13. The household also
included Nathan and Elizabeth
Meach. Nathan was a laborer
and they had married within
the years. (Could one of them be
related to Mary Ann?) Records
in the Wills Creek Lutheran
Church, Bedford County, PA,
show that Josiah & Mary Ann
became parents of a son, Daniel
Webster whose birth was registered as February 27, 1856.
(Some of the church records
are known to have been lost,
which may have included marriage records and births of
Mary Alice and John.)
A man named F. B. Hill
who ran a general store in
Bedford County, Pennsylvania,
kept a ledger he began using
on December 30, 1844. In that
book are notes during 1847 and
dr leitch
VOTE
2×2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-30-2012 / Drawing by Ed Fink
An artistic rendering by Ed Fink shows what the scene of the 1862 prairie fire might have looked like.
1848 of transactions between
Hill and Josiah Kellerman. On
July 20, 1847, there was credited 121/2 cents for bringing
a scythe from Bedford; on
October 19, 1847, 37 cents were
credited for work at dam; and
two days later, 121/2 cents for
hooping pickle tub and 50
cents on October 31, for going
for Miller and attending sale.
In 1848, Josiah began purchasing food. Researchers assume
this is because he had married. July 8, 1848, he purchased
151/2 lb. of Bacon for $1.24; in
August charged to his account
was 45 cents for 14 lb. of beef;
on November 3rd he bought 27
lb. of buckwheat flour for 401/2
cents; and on November 18th he
was charged 62 cents for half a
barrel of cider.
In 1854 land was made
available for homesteading
in Kansas. A party of some
Kellerman relatives and their
neighbors began their journey
to Kansas in 1857, traveling in a
caravan from Bedford County,
Pennsylvania.
Josiah and
Mary Anns young son, Eli, was
born in Missouri, according to
the 1860 Anderson County census. Known kin were residing
in Andrew County, Missouri,
and researchers speculate that
they stopped there awaiting
the babys birth. Sometime
after the 1860 census another
infant made its arrival, but no
record has come to light with a
given name. When beginning
his journey to Kansas, Josiah
was said to have 200 head of
cattle and sheep, but after
crossing the big Missouri River,
at Westport Landing, only 67
head remained. Josiah staked
a claim on land described as,
SE1/4 Section 35, Township
20, Range 17, at what became
known as Cottonwood, north
of the Cherry Mound (Kansas)
settlement.
Susan Mary Kellerman,
Josiahs younger sister (who
was residing with them at time
of the 1850 census), married
John Lantz Hill, also of Bedford
County, Pennsylvania. They
were also enumerated as residents of Anderson County in
the 1860 census. One of their
family members wrote years
later the following: Uncle
Joe [Josiah] and Aunt Mary
Kellerman homesteaded across
from Cottonwood school.
When Grandpa [John Lantz
Hill] and Uncle Irwin came
out in the spring of 1859, they
stayed there and homesteaded
the place – first house north of
Cherry Mound. They built the
log cabin at the corner. Think
they paid 25 cents an acre bot from an army man. Then
Grandpa went back alone to
Pennsylvania in the covered
wagon. Uncle Irwin stayed at
Uncle Joes. Grandpa and the
family, including Grandma
Kellerman, [and] Grandma
Hills mother, left in August
and arrived at Uncle Joes in
November! Mattie McElroys
father had homesteaded just
east of Cottonwood school and
Grandpa knew him well. As
Grandpas were coming through
Lawrence, Mr. McElroy came
running out to talk to him and
told Grandpa that he had been
run off his homestead. In time
he was able to return. It was
the struggle between the north
and south and at the time there
CHANGE
VOTE Dr. Leitch 4 Comm.
a VOTE For Lower Taxes
were bands of outlaws that ran
many off their places.
Research has revealed that
prior to their journey, Josiah
had purchased land in Eudora,
Douglas County, Kansas, earlier deeded to Chief Pascal
Fish, an Indian. But why he had
planned the move has left much
speculation. Rumors seem to
have abounded in handed down
stories researchers have found.
As a sheep farmer it could have
been that others objected to his
sheep, out on the open range,
eating too much prairie grass
to suit those who were cattlemen? Some kin were told he
was being forced to move. One
such story told of neighbors
forcing him to leave, with one
of them breaking a rifle when
striking him over the head.
(An item included in the auction of their remaining possessions was a gun stock). Was the
forced move related to the Civil
War upheaval in Kansas? Or
the long drought?
When setting out on their
journey, Josiah and Mary Ann
traveled north from their home
in Cottonwood and turned onto
the old Leroy-Ohio City St.
Rd. toward Ottawa. That night
was spent at the home of James
Means, on Kenoma Creek, near
where Harris, is now located.
The next morning Means could
see the distant smoke, and
urged them to wait to see what
was happening. No one will
ever know why Josiah chose
not to delay the journey. Was
there a reason for his hurry to
leave the area?
As the family traveled northeast past a hill, a side fire roared
suddenly down its slopes.
Caught first in those flames
were Mary Ann, Eli, and the
youngest boy (about 2 years),
reportedly in a covered wagon.
The wagon in which they were
traveling became mired in a
low muddy spot. Those three
perished immediately. Josiahs
attempts to reach and save
them were futile. Josiahs death
came in the night following
and reportedly at the home of
James Means. One of the bills
presented to Josiahs estate
was to Dr. George Cooper of
Garnett, and dated that October
30th for attending Josiah.
Researchers
are
still
attempting to determine where
the family was buried. Some
area kinfolk indicate the burials were at or near the site of
the prairie fire. But there is a
grave marker in the Goodrich
/Patton Cemetery, in Anderson
County.
[It was the Tipton family which donated land for that
cemetery and at the time it was
named the Goodrich Cemetery.
Rebecca Tipton, daughter of
garnett true value
4×8.5
those early settlers, married
Samuel Patton. Samuel built,
or had constructed, a large
brick house for them next
to his home which became a
stagecoach stop named Mineral
Point. That is apparently why
the cemeterys name became
known more commonly as the
Patton Cemetery. ] The current grave marker is not the
kind which could have been
available in 1862. And from
1958, until perhaps 2007, when
restoration was done in that
cemetery, the Kellerman grave
marker was placed at an angle
to all the other graves. This
caused researchers to conclude
that when placed originally, this
was done purposely to indicate
either that the remains were
not there, or that it was not
known for sure if the burials
were there.
The brother-in-law of Josiah,
John Lantz Hill, was named
administrator of the estate.
Those who did the appraisal
of the land at Cottonwood were
John Kennedy, Robert Burk
and Nelson Gabrelson.
In the 1960s, students at
the University of Kansas,
doing research at the Kenneth
Spencer Research Library in
Lawrence, found the description of Josiahs land in Eudora,
Kansas. His purchase of it
was recorded in the Douglas
County court Deed Book G,
page 1, September 13, 1862 – or
just a couple of weeks prior
to his moving date. It was in
Section 11, Township 13, Range
20. Josiah purchased this land
from John A. Kennedy and wife
Sarah N. Kennedy. Was this
John Kennedy the same man
who was later the appraiser
of Josiahs land in Anderson
County? On April 12, 1864 the
following men were appointed
John B. Campbell, Samuel
Steele and Richard Grubb
to appraise Josiahs land in
Douglas County.
Mary Alice Kellerman, a
survivor of the fire, married
a Missouri Militia Civil War
veteran and moved to Andrew
County, Missouri. She later
moved to California and then
Washington State. Most of her
descendants have been traced.
As for one of the mysteries remaining, very little has
5A
been learned about the surviving sons. Daniel Webster
Kellerman is found in the
1870 U.S. Andrew County,
Missouri census, residing with
Mary Alice Kellerman and
her husband Isaac Goodrich.
In Anderson County court
records there is a document
showing that Daniel Lankard
had been named guardian of
John Kellerman. Later John
Kellerman is found in the 1870
U.S. Anderson County, KS census. His is listed directly after
his Aunt Susan and Uncle John
Lantz Hill, apparently residing
with Margaret Weddle, who
was raised by the Hills. With
research continuing, said John
is believed to be the man of that
name found in the 1880 U.S.
Arizona census, as a resident
of Phoenix. A marriage record
shows John F. Kellerman and
Della Beechum married May
22, 1881, in Maricopa County,
Arizona (Marriages: vol. 1, page
67). One odd document came
to light. In Anderson County
a court document dated 26Jun
1940 states that …enough time
has passed, since the appointment [of Daniel Lankard as
guardian] that the guardian
should be discharged. Beyond
this all research has proven useless. What became of Daniel
W. Kellerman remains a huge
question. Surely, even though
150 years have passed, there are
family members of these two
somewhere, to whom word of
this calamity has been told, and
retold.
A story about this family
and the prairie fire was written and published in the 1990
book, Anderson County Family
Stories And History. Linda Fisk
McNeil of Portland, OR., was
the author. Juanita Kellerman
(a long time Kellerman researcher), of Garnett, also contributed
information about the prairie
fire in this book. Linda is making plans to visit Anderson
County to mark the 150th anniversary, to again tour the area
of the prairie fire and to visit the
marker in the Goodrich/Patton
Cemetery. She and Juanita
Kellerman, of Garnett, would be
happy to be in contact with anyone who might have an interest
in this story.
6A
OBAMA…
FROM PAGE 1A
he worked as an organizer to
help rebuild communities devastated by the closure of local
steel plants.
He went on to Harvard Law
School, where he became the
first African-American president of the Harvard Law Review.
Upon graduation, he took a job
teaching constitutional law at
the University of Chicago. He
also remained active in his community, leading a drive that registered more than 150,000 voters
in Illinois leading up to the 1992
election.
Barack Obama was first
elected to the Illinois State
Senate in 1996. During his time
in Springfield, he passed the
first major ethics reform in 25
years, cut taxes for working
families, and expanded health
care for children and their par-
ents. Elected to the U.S. Senate
in 2004, he reached across the
aisle to pass the farthest-reaching lobbyist reform in a generation, lock up the worlds most
dangerous weapons, and bring
transparency to government
by tracking federal spending
online.
As President, Barack Obama
has dedicated himself to putting Americans back to work
and restoring economic security to middle-class families.
Hes been driven by the basic
values that make our country
great: America prospers when
were all in it together, when
hard work pays off and responsibility is rewarded, and when
everyonefrom Main Street
to Wall Streetdoes their fair
share and plays by the same
rules.
– Taken from
www.barackobama.com
ROMNEY…
FROM PAGE 1A
first met in elementary school
when he was a Cub Scout; he
remembers tossing pebbles
at her when she rode by on
a horse. When they met again
years later at a friends house,
he was smitten. Between them,
they have five sons and eighteen
grandchildren, who are the center of their lives.
Like any family, the Romneys
have faced hardship: Ann was
diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1998, and more recently
fought a battle with breast cancer. She credits her husbands
unwavering care and devotion
to her for helping her through
these ordeals.
Mitt is not a career politician. He has spent most of his
life in the private sector, giving him intimate knowledge of
how our economy works. But
he has also been an outstanding
public servant. In one chapter
of his distinguished career, he
reversed the decline of a state
mired in recession. In another
chapter, he salvaged the 2002
Winter Olympic Games from
certain disaster.
When Mitt was elected
Governor of Massachusetts in
2002, the state was in severe disarray, its budget was out of balance, spending was soaring, and
taxpayers were being required
to pay more and more in taxes
for diminishing services. The
state economy was in a tailspin,
with businesses cutting back
on investment or even closing,
and unemployment ticking up.
Mitt made hard decisions that
brought state spending under
control. He restructured and
consolidated government programs, paring back where necessary and finding efficiencies
throughout.
Facing a state legislature
dominated by Democrats, Mitt
cast more than 800 vetoes as he
brought conservative principles
to state government. He cut red
tape for small businesses, signed
into law job-creating incentives,
and fought hard to bring new
businesses to the state. He eliminated a $3 billion deficit without borrowing or raising taxes.
By 2007, at the end of Mitts
term, the state had accumulated a $2 billion rainy day fund in
its coffers. This stringent fiscal
discipline provided an essential
backdrop for economic recovery. While Mitt was in office,
the state unemployment rate
fell from 5.6% to 4.7% and the
Massachusetts economy added
tens of thousands of new jobs.
America faces exceptional
challenges. Mitt Romney is an
exceptional man with unique
qualifications to lead our country through perilous times,
restoring our strength at home
and abroad.
the American Dream. I saw
its promise realized in the lives
of my parents. That isnt just
a line; that is my life. While I
believe America is the land of
opportunity, we must make certain there is opportunity for all,
not just for the few.
My first political experiences were stuffing envelopes for
2nd District Congresswoman
Martha Keys and Gov. John
Carlin. I earned a BA from the
University of Kansas (Class of
86). After attending seminary,
I returned to Topeka to live and
work.
2002, 2006; and a candidate
for United States House of
Representatives,
Kansas,
District 2, 2000, 2004.
He is an attorney at the Law
Office of Dennis Hawver, 1975present. He also is a captain and
Combat Intelligence Officer,
United States Air Force, 1966-
U.S. President
Barack Obama, D
Mitt Romney, R
A brief outline of the candidates primary plan:
OBAMA: Its time for a new economic
patriotism, rooted in the belief that growing
our economy begins with a strong, thriving
middle class. Over the past 31 months,
American businesses have created 5.2 million jobs. Independent economists project
that our economy will create an additional
12 million jobs in the next four years. The
President believes we must do even more
to grow our economy and strengthen the
middle class. The goal of his jobs plan is to
strengthen middle-class security by making
smart investments in education and training, growing small businesses, promoting
technology and innovation, and reducing
the deficit.
Building An Economy From
The Middle Class Out
Reviving American Manufacturing.
President Obamas policies have helped
manufacturing rebound, creating nearly
500,000 jobs in the last 31 months. The
Presidents plan will build on that success,
creating 1 million new manufacturing jobs
by 2016.
Energy Made in America. Dependence
on foreign oil hurts our economy and imperils national security, which is why President
Obama has set a goal of cutting our net oil
imports in half by 2020. President Obamas
policies have helped to cut net imports by
nearly 30% in his first term already, and his
plans to expand domestic energy production will support more than 600,000 jobs in
the natural gas sector alone.
Growing Small Businesses. Small businesses create two out of every three new
jobs in America. President Obama has
invested in entrepreneurs and small business owners by cutting taxes, helping them
expand into markets overseas and working
to ensure they can get the capital they need
to invest and gro.
Quality Education. A quality education
is not a luxury. It is an economic imperative
for goodpaying jobs, a strong middle class
and a workforce that out-innovates the
world. President Obama will strengthen our
schools by recruiting 100,000 math and science teachers, training 2 million workers for
real jobs at community colleges, and cutting
tuition growth in half.
Cutting The Deficit By More Than $4
Trillion. We must return to the principles that
made America great, rewarding hard work
and responsibility. By eliminating special
loopholes and tax breaks that benefit big
business and the wealthiest – as part of a
balanced deficit reduction plan that also
cuts spending we cant afford – we can
grow our economy without burdening our
children and grandchildren with debt.
Putting YOU in Charge of Your Health
Care. Health care costs were skyrocketing and families were denied care. So
President Obama passed a landmark law to
expand access to affordable insurance, letting young adults stay on their parents plan
until age 26, eliminating lifetime coverage
limits, ending denials based on pre-exisiting
conditions, and eliminating cost sharing and
other out-of-pocket costs for recommended
preventive care.
Protecting Retirement Security. We
can choose a future where we cut our
deficit without wrecking our middle class.
President Obama has put forward a specific, balanced plan of spending cuts and
revenue increases providing more than
$4 trillion in deficit reduction over the next
decade, without ending guaranteed benefits in Medicare or slashing Social Security.
In Congress, Jenkins is dedicated to fiscal responsibility, limited government, and
being an effective leader for
Kansans. Jenkins was assigned
to the House Ways & Means
Committee, which is the chief
tax-writing committee in the
House of Representatives.
Privately, Jenkins has served
as a board member of the Kansas
Society of CPAs, the Dwight
D. Eisenhower Excellence
in Public Service Honorary
Board of Governors, the Aspen
Institutes Rodel Fellowship in
nations like China that cheat on trade and
steal American jobs.
Part three is to provide Americans with
the skills to succeed through better public
schools, better access to higher education,
and better retraining programs that help to
match unemployed workers with real-world
job opportunities.
Part four is to cut the deficit, reducing
the size of government and getting the
national debt under control so that America
remains a place where businesses want to
open up shop and hire.
Finally, part five of Mitts plan is to
champion small business. Small businesses are the engine of job creation in this
country, but they will struggle to succeed if
taxes and regulations are too burdensome
or if a government in Washington does its
best to stifle them. Mitt will pursue comprehensive tax reform that lowers tax rates for
all Americans, and he will cut back on the
red tape that drives up costs and discourages hiring.
This election presents a clear choice,
and an important one: Will America once
again be the best place in the world to start
a business, hire a worker, or find a job? Or
will it continue down the path that President
Obamas borrowing and taxing and spending has led? America is still waiting for its
economic recovery and, as president, Mitt
Romney will deliver it.
District 2*
In the last two years, I realized I could no longer stand
on the sidelines. When Sam
Brownbacks administration
announced the closing of the
Kansas Neurological Institute,
I couldnt stay silent. Closing
KNI would have thrown into
chaos the lives of more than 155
Kansans with severe physical
and developmental disabilities.
I organized a coalition of community leaders, and helped convince legislators from both sides
of the aisle to keep KNI open.
This is just one of the initiatives
Ive helped with recently.
– Taken from
www.tobiasforcongress.com
SCHLINGENSIEPEN: I cant balance the
federal budget all by myself, but I can
promise that I will follow four basic principles as I do everything I can to restore
this nation to fiscal health. When considering any bill affecting the budget, I will
(1) protect your wallet, (2) seek fair tax
policies, (3) protect the elderly and vulnerable, and (4) maintain the functions we
rely on. These functions are under attack
today, and they include such vital things
as education, air traffic control services,
disaster response and accurate weather
forecasts.
We must take a balanced approach to
solving our budget problems. If it were in
effect this year, a proposal co-sponsored
by Congresswoman Jenkins would have
thrown 15 million more people out of work
than there are today. (This is the estimate
of Macroeconomic Advisers, a firm that
advises both Republican and Democratic
presidents.) As written, this constitutional
amendment, called the balanced budget
amendment, would have doubled unemployment, shooting the jobless rate up to
18 percent. I cant support such a badly
written proposal.
JENKINS: I ran for Congress because of
the reckless fiscal policies coming out of
Washington. Kansas common sense tells
me you cannot spend more than you take
in. My background as a certified public
accountant, state legislator, and state treasurer, has given me a unique perspective
to take to Washington. Families and small
businesses have to balance their books
and the government should be no different. I have always said there are two sides
to the ledger: the spending side and the
revenue side. Kansans are taxed enough
already, so the federal government needs
to address the spending side.
I am convinced now more than ever
that our federal governments greatest
problem is its addiction to spending.
Too many politicians who have been in
Washington for too long have forgotten that
taxpayers are what keeps our government
going, not the other way around. Instead of
being responsible and eliminating waste,
fraud, and abuse many politicians think
they have been given a blank check to do
as they please. I could not disagree more.
That is why I have stayed committed
to conservative fiscal policies that put
Americas security and future generations
first and foremost by voting for a balanced
budget amendment.
We cannot continue to give hostile
foreign nations greater influence over
us because we cannot stop borrowing
money from them. Nor can we simply
pass the burden on to our children and
grandchildren because we are unwilling
to make responsible decisions about the
federal budget. If we want to put our
nation back on the path to prosperity, we
need people in Washington who believe
in and will practice fiscal restraint. I pledge
to continue doing just that by opposing
wasteful earmarks, eliminating government
programs with no constitutional justification
and rooting out governmental corruption
and waste.
The one budget I have complete control over is my offices budget. Each year
I have served the people of Kansas, I
have cut my budget by more than 10%. I
returned that money to federal coffers and
I have continued to operate at a reduced
rate than allocated to me.
They are the teachers, the police officers
and the doctors caring for families in the
small towns of the 2nd District who will
literally save lives. But too many of them
carry crushing student loan debt. I support
giving students the right to repay their
loans at a fixed, low percentage of their
income for up to 20 years.
In voting for the Ryan Budget,
Congresswoman Jenkins voted repeatedly to cut or freeze Pell Grant funding
for needy college students. I support Pell
Grants. I will fight for families to continue
to receive a higher education tax credit,
which is set to expire in January.
JENKINS: The first thing I believe about
the relationship between government and
job creation is: government does not create economic growth; government creates
an environment that allows the economy to
grow and the private sector creates jobs.
According to the Department of Labor,
under the current administration 145,000
government jobs have been created. The
flip side to this equation is FactCheck.
orgs report that since President Obamas
term we have lost a total of 552,000 jobs
overall.
Following the passage of the 2009
stimulus package President Obama proclaimed the legislation would create or
save 3.5 million jobs and the unemployment rate would not rise above 8%. He
also promised the unemployment rate
would fall below 7.25% by the end of 2010.
Nearly four years later, our unemployment
rate hovers about 8.3% and the millions of
jobs promised by the stimulus seem to be
more hope, than change.
While the President was handing out
stimulus packages and bailouts, I went
straight to the job creators and job seekers.
Over the past three years I have hosted
3 Job Fairs that provide direct access to
those looking to hire people with those
looking for jobs. Staying true to the idea
that government does not create jobs,
government creates an environment that
allows businesses to create jobs and hire
people.
In addition to my work in the 2nd
District, while in Washington I have been
a proud supporter of 33 jobs bills that
create an environment for job creation
instead of handing out money to special
interest groups. Instead of providing alternative solutions, Harry Reid and Senate
Democratic leadership refused to even
vote on nearly every single jobs bill that
passed through the House.
I support eliminating lifetime benefit
caps.
I support providing affordable health
insurance. It is morally wrong to bankrupt
Americans with serious medical conditions, to price healthcare out of the reach
of working families or to put forth plans that
would put our nations finances at risk or
hobble businesses.
I support allowing young people to stay
on their parents health insurance plans
until age 26, providing access to preventative care and stopping insurance companies from wasting your premium money on
marketing and bloated bureaucracy.
JENKINS: As a member of the House
Ways and Means Committee I am working to repeal Obamacare and create real
health care reforms. Our plan includes
weeding out waste and fraud, giving tax
credits to allow people to buy their own
insurance, ending denial of care based on
pre-existing conditions, tort reform, letting
businesses band together to offer affordable insurance and allowing citizens to
buy insurance outside of their state of
residence.
At the heart of our health care problems is cost. The plan we are developing specifically targets the aspects of the
health care system that escalate costs.
Unfortunately, the Presidents health care
law ignores solving the problem of cost;
rather it cuts $716 billion from Medicare
and raises taxes to pay for new bureaucracy insurance mandate.
I believe if you lower the cost of health
care, more people will be able to purchase
insurance thus addressing both concerns.
The President has failed to prove that
by mandating the purchase of insurance,
costs of health care will fall. In fact, I
believe the opposite will happen and millions of Americans will have diminished
health care or denied it entirely.
Jobs
1971.
He is a member of the
Jefferson
County
Bar
Association,
1996-2002;
American Mensa, 1989-2000;
Kansas Bar Association,
1975-2002; and Third Judicial
District, Defense Counsel.
– Taken from
www.votesmart.org
Public Leadership Program,
and the American Council of
Young Political Leaders. She is a
graduate of Leadership Kansas
and has served on the Kansas
State University Accounting
Department Advisory Council,
the CASA Advisory Board,
the Kansas Childrens Service
League Board of Directors,
the YMCA of Topeka Metro
Board, the Auburn-Washburn
Public Schools Foundation
Board, and the Topeka Youth
for Christ Endowment Advisory
Committee.
– Taken from
www.lynnjenkins.com
Lynn Jenkins, R
Fiscal Responsibility
SCHLINGENSIEPEN: Invest in Education
Business leaders tell us that some of
the top things they look for when hiring
workers is education and the ability to
learn in an ever-changing workplace. We
must invest in education if were going
to grow our economy and compete in a
world marketplace. I will protect education
funding and work to make certain the state
receives the support it needs. I oppose
the No Child Left Behind law and applaud
Kansas for seeking a waiver.
Todays graduates of vocational-technical schools, community colleges and universities are the entrepreneurs and leaders
who will transform our economy tomorrow.
JENKINS…
FROM PAGE 1A
ROMNEY: Mitt Romneys Plan for a
Stronger Middle Class is a five-part proposal for turning around the economy and
delivering more jobs and more take-home
pay for American families. While President
Obama continues looking to big government spending programs as the solution to
the nations challenges, Mitt understands
that it is hardworking Americans in the
private sector who will achieve economic
growth and job creation. His plan will end
the middle class squeeze of declining
incomes and rising prices, bring back prosperity, and create 12 million jobs during
his first term.
Part one of Mitts plan is to achieve
energy independence on this continent
by 2020. America is blessed with extraordinary natural resources, and developing
them will create millions of good jobs
– not only in the energy industry, but also
in industries like manufacturing that will
benefit from more energy at lower prices.
Americas economy will boom when the
billions of dollars we send overseas for our
oil are kept here at home instead.
Part two of the plan is trade that works
for America. Mitt believes that trade can
offer enormous opportunities for American
businesses and workers, but only if they
are given a level playing field on which they
can compete and win. That is why he will
work to open new markets for American
goods and services, while also confronting
U.S. House of Representatives
Tobias Schlingensiepen, D
HAWVER…
FROM PAGE 1A
2012 Election: Candidate Comparison
– Taken from
www.mittromney.com/
SCHLINGENSIEPEN…
FROM PAGE 1A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
LOCAL
Health Care
SCHLINGENSIEPEN: We have a health
crisis in this country. Healthcare costs are
rising rapidly, and businesses are passing more of the insurance costs to their
employees. Workers, in turn, must cut
back on essential treatments because they
cant afford deductible and co-pays. And all
of this happens in the name of protecting
record profits for insurance companies.
This is unacceptable. We must continue
working to improve the healthcare system
in this country.
I support eliminating discrimination
against people with pre-existing conditions.
* Information for this comparison was taken from candidate websites. A website for Dennis Hawver, Libertarian
candidate, could not be found.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
7A
LOCAL
CH volleyball season Notice to inject saltwater
ends at sub-state
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Oct. 30, 2012)
BY SARA BROWN
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
FREDONIA – Central Heights
put together one of their best
matches of the season topping
Jayhawk Linn in the first round.
Unfortunately, the next match
ended the Vikings season with a
semi-final loss to Wellsville.
The Vikings went 25-21, 23-25,
25-23 in the win over Jayhawk
Linn. Central Heights Coach
Ann Bowen was proud of the
way the girls played and thought
it was easily the best match they
played all year. We were doing
all the things we had worked
on all season. I felt like everything had come together, said
Bowen.
Emily Millers jump serve
looked great. Alexis Dryden
and Kenzie Hayward played
well at the net and Whitney
Kraus was digging every ball in
the back row.
It was definitely a team
effort, declared Bowen. It was
such an exciting match. They
deserved the win.
Vs. Jayhawk Linn
Brianna Erhart: 11 assists, 2
aces, 3 kills
Sydney Meyer: 2 kills, 2 blocks
Kenzie Hayward: 10 kills, 6
blocks, 7 digs
Alexis Dryden: 7 kills, 4 blocks
(1 stuff)
Lexi Griffin: 5 digs
BEFORE THE STATE CORPORATION
COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
NOTICE OF FILING APPLICATION
Whitney Kraus: 1 ace, 9 digs
Emily Miller: 4 digs
Shannon Goldring: 3 kills, 1
RE: Veenker Resources, Inc. Application
block
for a permit to authorize the injection of
Tami Schaefer: 5 assists
saltwater into the Lockwood 10-VRI, Lockwood
After a lengthy break, the 112-VRI, Lockwood 91-VRI Cooper Richard
Vikings took the floor against Frost 112-VRI and Cooper Richard Frost (CRF)
Wellsville. The Vikings did 39-VRI located in Anderson, County, Kansas.
not carry the enthusiasm
and energy through from the TO: All Oil & Gas Producers, Unleased Mineral
first round and the semi-final Interest Owners, Landowners, and all persons
match ended with a 13-25, 18-25 whomever concerned.
loss. Wellsville is a good team
You, and each of you, are hereby notified
and we didnt have the intensity to compete, noted Bowen. that Veenker Resources, Inc. has filed an appliThough the loss was disappoint- cation to commence the injection of salt water
ing, Bowen was pleased with into the Bartlesville formation at the Lockwood
10-VRI located in the SW NE SW SE of Sec.
the teams effort.
We could have gone in feel- 32-22S-21E, the Lockwood 112-VRI located in
ing like we were seventh and it the SW SE NW SE of Sec. 32-22S-21E & the
wasnt worth the fight, but they Lockwood 91-VRI located in the NW NW SW SE
gave their all and I couldnt ask of Sec. 32-22S-21E, Anderson County, Kansas
for more. Wellsville went on to with a maximum operating pressure of 750# and
win sub-state earning a trip to
state in Salina. Central Heights
wrapped up their season with a
record of 6-23.
Vs. Wellsville
Brianna Erhart: 3 assists, 1 kill
Sydney Meyer: 1 block
Kenzie Hayward: 3 kills, 1 block,
2 digs
Alexis Dryden: 2 kills, 1 block
Lexi Griffin: 2 digs
Whitney Kraus: 6 digs, 1 kill
Emily Miller: 2 digs
Shannon Goldring: 2 kills, 1
block
Tami Schaefer: 2 assists
Signs of progress for CH
BY SARA BROWN
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELLSVILLE- The Vikings
finally got some offense going
Tuesday afternoon in Wellsville.
Unfortunately,
it
wasnt
enough to topple Wellsville or
Iola.
Central Heights forced
both games to three sets, but
came away with two losses. The
Vikings fell to Iola 18-25, 25-12,
15-25 and Wellsville 25-22, 12-25,
16-25.
Central Heights Coach Ann
Bowen was pleased with the
teams performance. The girls
played hard to the last point,
especially during the Wellsville
match. This is the level of
play we need at the mid- end of
October, remarked Bowen. We
had smart plays, hustle plays,
and gave 100% effort which is
something we had been working
on in practice.
Vs. Iola
Brianna Erhart: 6 assists
Tami Schaefer: 2 assists
Kenzie Hayward: 4 blocks (2
stuff), 7 kills, 12 digs
Alexis Dryden: 2 kills, 1 stuff
block
Whitney Kraus 12 digs
Shannon Goldring: 3 kills, 1
block
Sydney Meyer: 1 stuff block
vern valentine
2×2
a maximum injection rate of 75 bbls per day.
Also, into the Bartlesville formation at the Cooper
Richard Frost (CRF) 112-VRI, located in the NE
NE NE SW of Sec. 32-22S-21E & the Cooper
Richard Frost (CRF) 39-VRI, located in the NE
SW NE NW of Sec. 32-22S-21E, Anderson
County, Kansas with a maximum operating
pressure of 750# and a maximum injection rate
of 75 bbls per day.
Any persons who object to or protest this
application shall be required to file their objections or protest with the Conservation Division
of the State Corporation Commission of the
State of Kansas within fifteen (15) days from the
date of this publication. These protests shall be
filed pursuant to Commission regulations and
must state specific reasons why the grant of the
application may cause waste, violate correlative
rights or pollute the natural resources of the
State of Kansas.
All persons interested or concerned shall
take notice of the foregoing and shall govern
themselves accordingly.
Veenker Resources, Inc.
P.O. Box 14339
Oklahoma City, OK 73113
(405) 751-1414
oc30t1
maloans
2×4
RESOLUTION NO. 2012,1022:1
A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING
SUNDAY
SALES
OF ALCOHOLIC
LIQUOR AND CEREAL MALT BEVERAGES
IN THE ORIGINAL PACKAGES IN
THE UNINCORPORATED AREAS OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE BOARD
OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS AS
FOLLOWS:
Pursuant to K.S.A. 41-2911(b)(1),
the sale at retail of cereal malt beverages in
the original package is allowed on any Sunday,
except Easter, between the hours of 12:00
noon and 8:00 P.M. in the unincorporated
areas of Anderson County, Kansas.
Pursuant to K.S.A. 41-2911(b)(1), the
sale at retail of alcoholic liquor in the original
package is allowed on any Sunday, except
Easter, between the hours of 12:00 noon and
dr leitch
VOTE
2×2
8:00 P.M., and on Memorial Day, Independence
Day and Labor Day in the unincorporated
areas of Anderson County, Kansas.
This Resolution shall be published
once each week for two consecutive weeks
in the official county newspaper.
This Resolution shall take effect 61
days after final publication, unless a sufficient
petition for a referendum is filed, requiring
a referendum to be help on the Resolution
as provided in K.S.A. 41-2911(b)(1), in which
case this Resolution shall become effective
upon approval by a majority of the electors
voting thereon.
Dated this 22nd day of October, 2012.
$9.99*
PRIME RIB or SIRLOIN
Friday & Saturday Night
785-448-2616
County allows Sunday liquor
sales in unincorporated areas
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Oct. 30, 2012)
garnett rotary
2×5
/s/Dudley Feuerborn, Chairman
/s/Eugene Highberger, Commissioner
James K. Johnson, Commissioner
Seal
ATTEST:
/s/Phyllis Gettler, County Clerk
oc30t2
CHANGE
VOTE Dr. Leitch 4 Comm.
a VOTE For Lower Taxes
Congratulations on Qualifying for State Cross Country!
State cross country
6×10.5
These area businesses proudly support our youth…
8A
SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
AC frosh CC get
experience at state
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WAMEGO – A young Bulldog
cross country team cut their
teeth at the state meet Saturday,
and though they finished 12th
out of 12 teams the experience
is bound to pay off for next year
for the freshmen and sophomores that will make up the
2013 team.
Senior Amanda Moody finished 57th out of 97 runners who
competed. Moody ran a 16:57.10
in her final cross country performance as an AC Bulldog.
Freshman Isabel Sibley led
the remainder of the team of
underclassmen with a 72 finish
and a time of 17:38.10. Freshman
Gwen Sibley was 75th in a time
of 17:46.50. Sophomore Bailee
Wilson was 77th in a time
of 17:54.60, freshman Paige
Scheckel was 78th in 17:56.20,
Remington Hedges, also a freshman, was 83rd in 18:06.50 and
sophomore Eliza Sibley finished
85th in 18:14.50.
First place individual in the
womens division went to junior
Katren Reinbolt of Fort Scott
with a time of 14:50.20, ahead
of second place finisher Paige
White, a senior from Baxter
Springs, with 15:28.40.
Team
standings
were
Hayden in first place followed
by Winfield, Baldwin, Wichita
Trinity Academy, Paola, DeSoto,
Rose Hill, Wamego, Clay Center,
Ulysses, Pratt and Anderson
County.
Online at www.garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-30-2012 / Sara Brown
Abby Brown, 11, makes a jump cut narrowly avoiding a tackle in the Richmond Red Devils win over
Appanoose. The Red Devils are one of three 5th & 6th grade teams from Central Heights.
Local youth return to the gridiron
BY SARA BROWN
THE ANDERSON
WILLIAMSBURG- The sounds
of crowds cheering, whistles
blowing, and touchdown calls
fill the air of small-town football
fields every weekend. However,
it isnt the glow of the Friday
night lights calling fans to root
for their favorite team. This
time it is the chill of an October
Saturday morning welcoming
players, parents, and patrons
to watch teams from three local
communities take the field.
Appanoose, Williamsburg,
and Richmond recreation programs coordinate a youth flag
football league for six weeks
every Fall.
Approximately
150 children participate in the
program, representing a total
of 21 teams. The league is
divided into three brackets by
grade level: first and second,
third and fourth, and fifth and
sixth. Local students and high
school football players serve
as referees for the 40 minute
games, which each community
hosts for two weeks per season.
Coaches, primarily parents,
welcome the assistance of high
school athletes who often volunteer to help instruct players.
Appanoose and Williamsburg
started the league six years ago,
with Richmond joining for the
past two.
Todd Burroughs,
one of the original organizers
noted, It gives kids a chance
to have fun playing a fall sport
with their friends while building self-esteem. Ryan Sink,
another early coordinator,
believes one of the most important benefits of the program is
that the kids learn teamwork.
The program has received
good, positive comments and
has gotten more teams every
year, reports Sink. Hopefully
it will continue to grow.
If flag football sounds less physical than tackle football, dont
tell that to the kids (or the parents). They give it their all
and make some amazing plays.
Contact is a part of football,
and it is inevitably a part of flag
football, too. The grind for this
year is almost through. Next
Saturdays games will conclude
the 2012 flag football season.
Assuredly, when the leaves
begin to fall next year, the
cheers and whistles and smiles
will return.
diebolt
3×7.5
30 Year
Vikings fight their way to state playoffs
BY SARA BROWN
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND- The Vikings
delivered quite a gift for Senior
Parent night at Central Heights.
The 38-13 win over district
opponent, Osage City, earned
the Vikings a trip to the 3A bidistrict post-season.
Central Heights collected a
total of 403 yards on the ground.
Drew Beckwith led the team
with running 213 of them and
two touchdowns. One of the
touchdowns was a 64 yard gallop by the senior RB. Senior
Keith Shrimpton got free for
two scores of his own. Junior
Tristan Davis ran for 6 points
and freshman RB Jacob Pryor
added a final touchdown in the
fourth quarter.
The win improves the
Vikings record to 4-5 overall
and 2-1 district. They will
travel to Humboldt to play the
first round bi-district matchup
Tuesday night at 7 p.m.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc..
(785) 448-3121
tyson
4×8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 06-29-2010 / Photo Submitted
Central Heights Senior Keith Shrimpton gets past the Osage City
defenders and takes this one in for a touchdown in the 38-13 victory.
The Vikings (4-5) take on St. Marys-Colgan (6-3) at Humboldt.
Crest tops Tyro enroute to
Kiowa bi-district playoffs
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
KIOWA – The Crest Lancers
stepped over Tyro Christian in
a score-ruled contest Thursday
night that set up Crests appearance tonight against South
Barber at Kiowa for the first
round of 1A bi-district.
Crest dusted Tyro 52-6. Tyro
was a late-season fill-in game
after Altoona failed to field a
football team after the schedules had been set late last summer.
The Kiowa Chieftains are 7-2,
5-0 in their league and ranked
25th in Kansas. Theyre coming
off a win over Cunningham on
Thursday 46-0.
Crest comes into the bi-district game with a record of 63 and 3-2 in the Three Rivers
League.
Scoring order for Crests Tyro
replacement game included
Dylan Sedlak, PAT failed; Kyle
Hammond, PAT Hammond;
Brock Ellis, PAT pass Hammond
to Ellis; Hammond, PAT failed;
Sedlak, PAT Hammond, Ellis
interception return for TD,
Hammond PAT. Game ended
with 6:50 remaining in third
period.
Colors Available
COMMUNITY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
CALENDAR
Wednesday, October 31
Halloween
1:30 p.m. – GES Halloween
parade
2 p.m. – Greeley Halloweeen
parade
2:30 p.m. – Westphalia Halloween
parade
5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. – Haunted
Library at Santa Fe Depot
Thursday, November 1
8:45 a.m. – TOPS #247 at the
Garnett Town Hall Center
12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. – Line
dancing at Garnett
Senior Center
5:30 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
Carry In Supper at the Garnett
Senior Center; pitch at 6 p.m.
1:30 p.m. – Colony United
Methodist Women at Colony
United Methodist Church
6 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
7 p.m. – USD 365 School Board
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44
Friday, November 2
7 p.m. – Texas Hold Em at VFW
Monday, November 5
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at Pizza Hut
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic
Lodge No. 338
Tuesday, November 6
7 a.m. to 7 p.m. – Election Day,
polls open
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
3:30 p.m. – ACHS Scholars Bowl
at Wellsville
4 p.m. – Crest Scholars Bowl
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
6:30 p.m. – Greeley Site Council
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
Wednesday, November 7
5:30 p.m. – USD 365
Booster Club
7 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony Methodist Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, November 8
8:45 a.m. – TOPS #247 at the
Garnett Town Hall Center
12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. – Line
dancing at Garnett Senior Center
5 p.m. – Westphalia boys/girls
basketball with St. Rose
5:30 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
Carry In Supper at the Garnett
Senior Center; pitch at 6 p.m.
Friday, November 9
10:30 a.m. – Veterans Day
ceremony at ACHS
7 p.m. – Central Heights fall play
Saturday, November 10
7 a.m. to 10 a.m. – VFW breakfast
7 p.m. – Central Heights fall play
Sunday, November 11
Veterans Day
Monday, November 12
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
4 p.m. – ACHS Scholars Bowl at
Sterling Six
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More information:
(620) 365-2255
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LOCAL
Westphalia Autumn Days
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 06-29-2010 / Vickie Moss
Ronin Calley of Scipio and Makylie VanPatten of Westphalia search for coins among the fall leaves in a cash grab event at
Westphalia Autumn Days Saturday, Oct.27.
Veterans Day
program on
Nov. 9
Veterans Day Program will be
held on Friday, November 9th in
the auditorium of the Anderson
County High School; due to the
fact that Veterans Day falls on
Sunday. The Veteran of Foreign
Wars and the American Legion
feel that it is important that the
program be made available to
not only the adults of the area,
but to the students as well.
The program will begin at
10:30am with the Veterans Day
Ceremony to commence at
11:00am. We have a very interesting guest speaker this year;
Mrs. Lucia Roe, the wife of last
years speaker, Col. Thomas Roe.
Mrs. Roe is not only married to
a career military officer, but is
an Army Brat, the daughter
of a career non-commissioned
officer.
For those who have a problem
with the observance not being
on Nov. 11, please take note that
the next five years it will fall on
Monday-Friday.
The Auxiliary will ahve a
lunch at the post after the program, $5 per person.
Petrie to
display art
At left, Logan Gordon aims a slingshot at a target at the Boy Scouts booth.
Above, Kennedy Noonan of Burlington gets a horseback ride on Hootie, courtesy
of Sierra Gould and Rodney Gould, Hartford.
Fall suppers
at Richmond
With the calendar turning to
November, its time for two fall
suppers at Richmond.
The United Methodist Church
will have its traditional beef/
noodle supper Saturday, November 3, serving 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
The menu features locally
grown beef, with noodles and all
the side dishes for adults $7 and
children under three, $3.
Included in the evening are a
bake sale and drawing for prizes which include one of Mary
Halls paintings, cash gifts, a KState basket and other items.
Two weeks later, on November
17, will be the Richmond
Community Museum chili and
soup supper, serving from 5-7
p.m. at the Community Building.
Chili or soup with relishes and
dessert will be served for a donation.
There will also be drawing
for prizes. The Museum will be
open after 3 p.m. with no admission charge.
denise cassels
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County Review
785-448-3121
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Norma Petrie, of Garnett,
will be displaying her artwork throughout the month of
November at the Works of Art
Gallery.
The gallery will be hosting
a Meet the Artist reception for
Norma from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 3. Norma may
demonstrate during this time.
The Works of Art is located
on the east side of the square at
103 S. 9th in Humboldt. Hours
are Sunday and Monday-closed,
Tuesday – Thursday from 11 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Friday and Saturday
from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
LOCAL
Home heating has changed
From the crude open fireplaces of log cabin days to the
automatic gas and oil furnaces of today, home heating has
undergone a great change.
The large wood burning
fireplace, located in the principal room of the cabin or in the
kitchen if there was one, served
to provide heat for warmth and
cooking, plus light for interior illumination and reading.
With its long crane, its pots and
kettles, its oven built into the
back wall, and its trivets, bellows, and other equipment, the
fireplace was a vital part of the
early day home. Prominent in
the list of other equipment were
the trammels or pot hooks, also
known as hakes, clams, claws,
clips, brakes, hangars and
crooks. These hung first from
a log-pole, and then from a long
crane. In front of the hearth
a sheltered bench, known as a
warming bench, where the family enjoyed the warmth of the
fireside on cold evenings.
As houses grew in size,
smaller fireplaces were added
to warm bedrooms and living
rooms, the fuel being wood or,
in some places, coal.
by Henry Roeckers
Contact (785) 448-6244
for local archeology information.
Eventually the big kitchen
range made of iron with its
ovens, its lids and lid lifters,
and stovepipe replaced the open
fireplace for cooking. Heating
then was accomplished with the
aid of small stoves, including
Franklin stoves and pot-bellied
stoves which made more efficient use of the fuel when placed
in or in front of fireplaces.
Since it was not customary in
those frugal days to heat rooms
when they were not in use, bedrooms got mighty cold in winter
time and, when it came time
to retire, long-handled warming
pans were placed between the
sheets to warm the beds before
the occupants arrived.
Bedrooms were equally cold
on frosty winter mornings
and, after reluctantly leaving a
warm bed, everyone rushed to
the kitchen fireplace or stove
in the hope that there would be
enough smoldering coals from
the night before to start up a
blaze when kindling was added.
As houses grew larger, a need
for central heating arose, and it
first was provided by means of
a coal-burning fireplace in the
basement which sent heat up
through an opening a register
centrally located in the first
floor. Later, hot air was piped to
each room through registers in
the floor or wall, as is the case
today with gas and oil furnaces.
Use of a coal furnace meant
there had to be a coal bin in the
basement near the furnace, and
there had to be coal shovels, ash
cans, pokers, and other accessories.
The furnace had to be stoked
and banked at night, grates had
to be shaken, clinkers had to be
broken up, and ashes had to be
removed from the furnace and
carried outside in ash cans. In
those days, there was a lot more
to keeping a home warm than
just moving the indicator on a
thermostat.
Keep kids safe when trick-or-treating
TOPEKA Kansas Attorney
General Derek Schmidt today
reminded parents to keep kids
safe when trick-or-treating by
taking time to plan before their
Halloween outings.
Halloween can be a fun
night for kids and adults, but it
can also be a night when those
who wish to harm children take
advantage of the relaxed atmosphere, Schmidt said. Its
important that parents take
time to plan and make good
decisions so the kids can enjoy
a night of fun.
Schmidt offered the follow-
ing tips for parents to keep their
kids safe:
Plan your trick-or treating
route only in neighborhoods
you know well and visit only
houses that are well-lit.
Always have a parent or
other responsible adult accompanying young children.
Check the Kansas offender
registry at www.kbi.ks.gov/registeredoffender when planning
your childs trick-or-treat route.
You can view maps showing
registered sex, drug and violent
offenders along your planned
route.
Always carry a flashlight
with fresh batteries.
Choose costumes that are
brightly colored or reflective so
they are visible in the dark.
Make sure they fit properly
to avoid trips and falls. Avoid
masks that restrict eyesight.
Check all treats before
allowing children to eat them.
Make sure candy is still in its
original packaging and has not
been tampered with.
For more information on
keeping kids safe, visit the
Attorney Generals website at
www.ag.ks.gov.
1992: Perot carries county in election
Oct. 29, 2002
Anderson County voters go
to the polls next week to make
a decision on a $5.2 million
new jail construction proposal,
cast a vote of confidence in an
unopposed county commissioner and make their choice in a
number of statewide races. The
major local issue in this election
revolves around the question to
raise an additional one percent
county-wide sales tax to fund
the construction of a $5.2 million jail facility planned for
property in the Golden Prairie
Industrial Park in Garnett.
The project to construct a
$32 million ethanol production
facility in Garnett got a boost
from the federal government
with the announcement of the
award of a $450,000 grant to
the project by the United States
Department of Agriculture.
Nov. 5, 1992
Though he may not have
made much of a dent in what
would become Bill Clintons
presidency, Ross Perot carried
popular votes in Anderson and
two other Kansas counties and
tied George Bush for a third in
Tuesdays presidential election.
Popular vote counts in Kansas
showed Perot in second place in
Kansas with 387,488 votes. Bush
had 445,790 and Clinton 309,523.
Nationally, Perot pulled about
18 percent of the popular vote
and no electoral votes. Perot
support was high in Anderson
County before the election,
mainly from former Republican
supporters who had grown disillusioned with George Bush
and the Republican administration.
What was thought to be a
national wave of anti-incumbency going into Tuesdays
election fell flat by the time
voters got to the polls on election day. In major Kansas race
and regional races of which
Anderson County was a part,
incumbents won sound victories over challengers.
by Vickie Moss
Staff Writer
Anti-incumbency fever may
not have had the impact it was
expected to have nationwide,
but in Anderson County races
each incumbent in a contested
race was booted from office in
one of the largest voter turnouts in recent memory. Voter
turnout in the county was
over 80 percent. In the race for
Anderson County Clerk, firsttime politician Phyllis Nolan
ousted two-term incumbent
Arlene Patton. Democrat Franz
Aubry thumped Republican
incumbent Fred Litsch for sheriff.
Nov. 1, 1982
A tool that uses sound waves
to detect disorders of the internal organs in the body has
been acquired recently by the
Anderson County Hospital. The
device, a sonogram, has been
used to detect abnormalities
in babies before they are born
without the use of x-rays. But
there are other uses, including detecting aneurysms or the
ballooning of arteries, tumors
in internal organs, gall stones
and kidney disorders. The
first experimental uses of the
device began in the late 1940s.
However, sonograms have not
been widely used until the last
few years in smaller hospitals.
Oct. 30, 1912
We take pleasure today in
presenting our readers with
a cut of the new Methodist
Episcopal Church, which is now
nearing completion and which
will be dedicated Sunday, Nov.
10. The church is 97 feet north
and south on Oak Streets, by
75 feet east and west on Second
Avenue, with a basement. The
basement has ample fuel and
furnace room, a well-appointed kitchen, two fine rooms for
young peoples meetings and a
large and convenient room for
social occasions and two wellappointed toilets and lavatories.
The main floor is divided into
15 rooms. The building was
erected by J.Q. McAfee and it
will stand here many years as
a monument to his ability as a
builder.
Vote Gene
gene highberger
2×3
HIGHBERGER
Im running for 3rd District
County Commissioner on
November 6th and would
appreciate your vote.
church directory
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Lumber
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112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
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GEM Farm Center
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
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Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
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(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Hill 90th birthday
LOCAL
Safe Halloween moved to shelter house
The Iota Iota Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will be hosting their
Safe Halloween on Wednesday,
Oct. 31, from 5 p.m.-7 p.m. The
event has been moved to the
Heritage Park Shelter House.
The group will be serving hot
dogs, chili, nachos and drinks,
in addition to other Halloween
treats. Everyone welcome.
Happy Birthday wishes to
Bob Orth, who celebrated his
special day this past week.
Happy Birthday Pam Clinton
and Tiffany Marmon on Oct. 19
and Rylie Page on Oct. 20.
Happy Birthday to Jeanie
Widner on Oct. 28.
Krista Lloyd was honored at
a surprise baby shower and dinner on Wednesday, Oct. 17 at
the home of her grandmother,
Mildred Burk. Those attending
included siblings Marvin Stahl,
Tina Sharrow, Tiffany Singer
and Kendra Browning, her
mother Coleen Stahl and friend
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-30-2012 / Photo Submitted Vickie Singer.
The Donaldson/Brownback
The Hill girls, Louann,
Open house begins at 2 p.m.
families hosted a chili supper
Roberta and Shirley, invite at the Community Building,
and hay rack ride on Saturday
you to celebrate their mother, North Lake, Garnett.
evening (Oct. 20) and the home
Allenes, 90th birthday Saturday,
Please bring stories to share.
of Justin and Kelsi Donaldson.
November 3, 2012.
There were over 50 friends and
family members who enjoyed
the beautiful autumn evening
event.
Fink 93rd birthday
Vivian L. Fink was born
Nov. 7, 1919 and will celebrate
her birthday on Saturday,
Nov. 3, at the Clubhouse at
Park Plaza North. Family and
friends are encouraged to visit
between 1 and 3 p.m.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-30-2012 /
Photo Submitted
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
Holiday
Open
House
by Judy Kinder
Contact (913) 898-6465 or
True.blue.ku@gmail.com
with Parker news.
Church News
Methodist Church: Rita
Kerr gave the Call to Worship.
Pastor Marti McDougal gave
the Opening Prayer and led
the congregation in the Unison
Prayer of Confession. Pastor
McDougal then conducted
the Time with the Young
Disciples and the lesson was
titled Showing Everyone that
they are Important to God.
The Congregational Hymn
was titled My Song is Love
Unknown. Marilyn Rhoades
read the Scripture Lesson
from Hebrews 5:1-10. Pastor
McDougals Sermon Text was
read from Mark 10:35-45. The
sermon was titled That had
a lot of Nerve! Candle lighter
was Kristy Schmitz. Greeters
were Al Kerr and Juanita Fann.
Ushers were Al Kerr and Jim
Schmitz. Pianist and Music
Director was Sue Swonger.
The Ladies Bible Study group
began this years session on
Thursday, Oct. 25 at the home
of Carole McKnight. Classes
will be from 9:30am-11:30am
each week; all ladies are welcome (Contact Carole at (913)
898-2413).
Baptist Church: The congregation welcomed Oklahoma
Evangelist Warren Garraway
for the Sunday services. For the
morning service, scripture was
read from Romans 6 and the
message was titled Reaching
Others for Jesus. The evening
sermon was titled The Ministry
of Reconciliation and Brother
Garraway read scripture from
Second Corinthians 7.
Amazing Grace and Full
Gospel Church (Goodrich): The
childrens class learned about
Esther and their Memory
Verse was read from Isaiah 12:2.
The intermediate and adult
classes studied Hebrews 12:117 and their lesson was titled
Embrace Right Living. Mike
Muchow served as guest speaker and his message was titled
Sin and Pride. Scripture was
read from Second Kings 5:8-26.
The congregation welcomed
visitor, David Ashley.
3B
Centerville News
Happy Birthday wishes
to Ella Kay Taylor on Oct. 21,
Jonathan McPherson on Oct.
22, Mike McPherson on Oct. 23
and Jim Larson on Oct. 24.
Happy Anniversary to Jim
and Amy Larson on Oct. 24 and
Tammy and Keith Brownback
on Oct. 26.
The Exercise Monday group
has rescheduled their weekly
meeting time to 8:30 a.m.; the
class is held at the Centerville
Community
Churchs
Fellowship Hall.
The Friends & Pieces quilting
group meets each Wednesday in
the basement of the Centerville
Community Church; the meeting time has been changed to 10
a.m.
The Centerville Betterment
Supper was Friday, Oct. 26.
Centerville
Community
Church Hymns included Great
and Mighty, Praise the Lord
Ye Heavens Adore Him, Great
are You Lord and I then Shall
Live. Pastor Nancy SnyderKillingsworths message was
titled Great is the Lord and
scripture was read from Joshua
21:1-45. Music accompaniments were provided by Nancy
Lanham.
What is the nature of your soul?
The Bible makes many references to the soul. If a surgeon were to perform surgery
on you he would never find a
soul. Webster defines the soul
as The spirit in man that is
believed to be separate from
the body and is the source of
a persons emotional, spiritual
and moral nature.
In Psalm 23:3 we read that,
He (God) restores my soul.
This gives us a reason to believe
that our soul can from time
to time need some fine tuning
from God. As I said if a surgeon
goes looking for a soul he cannot find one. That having been
said the soul is very clearly
displayed in each of us by our
nature.
In Matthew 10:28 we read.
Do not be afraid of those who
kill the body but cannot kill the
Weekly
Devotional
by David Bilderback
soul. Rather be afraid of the
One who can destroy both soul
and body in hell. This passage clearly states that our soul
lives on after our body is dead.
Paul says in 2nd Corinthians
5:8 that if we are Absent from
the body we are present with
the Lord. Immediately upon
death the spirit of the believer
passes into the presence of the
Lord.
A persons soul is much like
the wind. You cant see the
wind you just see the results of
HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE
Fri, Nov. 2 & Sat., Nov. 3
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Food Samples
it. You cant see a persons soul
but you see the results of it as
they live out their life. I dont
know where the soul resides.
This is one of Gods mysteries.
I do know that the soul is the
place in each of us where the
heart and mind of God exists.
Our heart is vital to our earthly
existence our soul is vital to
our heavenly existence. Just as
our heart needs regular exercise and a healthy diet our soul
needs to be a part of a body of
believers and in the word of
God to stay healthy.
I believe our soul controls
our heart and our mind. Our
soul belongs to God. In Ezekiel
18:4 we read, For every living
soul belongs to me (God), the
father as well as the son-both
alike belong to me. That is
why God made the soul such
a mystery. The eternal life or
death of your soul is left totally
to Almighty God. If you accept
Jesus Christ as your personal
Savior you are sealed till the
day of redemption. When your
soul becomes absent from the
body it will be present with the
Lord. If you have not accepted
Jesus as your personal Savior
God says in Ezekiel 18:4, The
soul who sins is the one who
will die.
Jesus issues each of us an
invitation in Revelation 3:20, I
stand at the door and knock.
If anyone hears my voice and
opens the door, I will come in
and eat with him and he with
me. Wont you partake of
Jesus great banquet.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
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421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues – Fri. 10-5
Make your presents felt
Sat. 10-2
Garnett
785-448-3038
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St. Rose School Support Group
Holiday Craft Show and Bierock Sale
Saturday, November 3, 2012 9:00-4:00
St. Rose School E. 4th Avenue, Garnett, KS
st rose
2×2
The Famous St. Rose Bierocks
Fresh baked bierock lunches and packaged, frozen
bierocks will be sold during the show. Fresh baked
St. Rose bread and cinnamon rolls will be sold as
long as supply lasts. Questions contact Sue Hardman
at 785-304-2051.
garnett true
value
2×4
miller hardware
2×4
candy bouquet
Friday, November 2
2×5
8:00am – 5:30pm
Saturday, November 3
9am – 4pm
Register for Drawings
New Purses, Jewelry,
Jeans, Rhinestone
T-shirts
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
LOCAL
Notice of delinquent personal property taxes
Notice of tax levies in county
(First published in The Anderson County Review, Oct. 16, 2012)
(First published in The Anderson County Review, Oct. 30, 2012)
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CONTRACTORS
Guide
contractors guide
6×11.5
S O N B RO
M
A
S
D
.
A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
5B
LOCAL
Colony planning for Picture Perfect Christmas parade
Calendar
Nov. 1-county bus to Garnett,
phone 24 hrs. before you need
a ride, 785-448-4110 any weekday; Community Church
Missionary, church annex, 1:30
p.m.; United Methodist Women,
United Methodist Church fellowship hall, 7 p.m.; Nov. 4Daylight Saving Time ends, turn
clocks back one hour; 5-cemetery board meeting, city office,
7 p.m.; 6-Election Day vote, so
important; 7-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement, 7
p.m.; fire meeting, fire station, 7
p.m.
School Calendar
Nov. 1-middle school basketball at Pleasanton, 5 p.m.;
2-Picture retakes, 8:30 a.m.; 3high school football regionals;
5-middle school basketball at St.
Rose, 5 p.m.; 6-scholars bowl
at Central High School, 4 p.m.;
7-FCCLA fall leadership conferences, Garnett.
Meal Site
Nov. 2-chicken burger,
autumn blend veggies, macaroni salad, bun, jello with fruit;
5-chicken tetrazzini, winter
blend veggies, bread, applesauce; 7-meatloaf, baked potato,
California blend, roll, bread
pudding. Games played each
meal day. Phone 852-3479 for
meal reservations. For prescription drug program, phone Area
Agency at Ottawa 800-633-5421.
Churches
Scripture read Oct. 21 at
the Christian Church service
was Luke 7:36-50. Pastor Mark
McCoys sermon-Not a fanChoosing Intimacy. Prayer
and coffee 9 a.m. every Sunday;
Mens Bible study at the church
7 a.m. Tuesday; Infusion
groups-studying not a fan by
Kyle Idleman. Plan to attend
one of the groups. Contact
Mark McCoy. Nov. 4-Daylight
savings time ends, turn clocks
back; picnic and hayrack ride
at Kendall McGhees, 3 p.m.,
bring a side dish or dessert,
hot dogs and drinks provided;
Nov. 6-vote in election which is
very important for our country; Nov. 14-Working Wonders
Christian Womens Council, 7
p.m., all women are welcome;
Nov. 17-Harvest Feast at the
Community Center, 6 p.m., congregation bring vegetables, salads and desserts-meat, potatoes,
and rolls provided.
The United Methodist
Women held their October meeting with Vivian Barnett, president conducting the meeting.
Guest speaker was Ava Marney,
Big Sister, Humboldt. Susan
McCollam was welcomed as a
by Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net
with Colony news.
new member. Pat Heldebrant
reported on monthly challenges. October challenge-fill shoeboxes with toys for different age
groups from five to twelve years
old. These will be sent to a mission that distributes worldwide.
The November challenge is to
fill Santa sacks for teenagers.
The chicken noodle supper is
Oct. 27; serving is 5:30-8 p.m.
The menu also includes vegetables, salads and desserts.
Bazaar items will also be for
sale. Quilt drawing will be
made. Barnett served refreshments. The Nov. 1 meeting will
begin 12:30 with a Thanksgiving
luncheon.
Scripture Oct. 21 at United
Methodist Church service was
Psalm 104:1-9, Proverbs 3:9-10
and Mark 10: 35-45. Pastor Leslie
Jackson gave the sermon.
VOTE
November 6 is the date. It is
most important you vote! Polls
open at 7 a.m. at the City Hall
community room and close 7
p.m. Ozark and Indian Creek
townships vote here.
CEF
Crest Lancer Country yard
signs are for sale! They are $12
each. The signs are 24×18
and come with a metal stake.
They will be columbia blue with
red lettering. Order forms are
available in both Crest offices
or they can be purchased at the
chili supper as well. Dec 11-Taco
bar at the basketball game.
Christmas Parade
Saturday, Dec. 1 has been set
for the 8th annual Christmas
Parade in Colony. This years
theme is A Picture Perfect
Christmas. The event held in
the business area begins with
the parade lineup at 6 p.m.
Other events and time will be
announced later. Plan on having a float this year! Contact
Trena Golden at the bank 8523512 for an entry.
4-H
The Seekers Not Slackers
4-H club met on Oct. 15 at the
Lone Elm community building.
Roll call was answered by 22
members and two leaders with
what they were dressing for
AD
2×4
20%30%
CHEAPER
schulte
2×6
Halloween. Karson Hermreck
and Jerrick Jones led the club
in saying the flag salute and 4-H
Pledge. Lanie Walter and Cassie
Bowen led the club in singing
Itsy Bitsy Spider. Community
leader CJ Lacey reported the 4H Achievement banquet would
be held Nov.11 at 12:30 p.m. at
the Anderson County Jr-Sr
High School. All families are
to bring two covered dishes, a
main and a side dish. Officer
training will be held immediately following the banquet and
awards program. Enrollment
forms are due next month. The
next council meeting will be
held Nov. 5. Community project
leader Kathy LaCross reported
she would hold a project meeting in November on preparing
goats for kidding.
A Halloween party was held.
Members split into four teams
and decorated pumpkins while
blindfolded. They also bobbed
for apples and had a costume
contest. Karson Hermreck won
most original, Lanie Walter
most cute, Jerrick Jones most
funny and Hailey Gillespie
most scary. The Vermillion and
Nicki Sprague families provided
refreshments. Announcements:
next meeting Nov. 19 at 7 p.m.
at the Lone Elm community
building. Roll call-your favorite
Thanksgiving food. Program
led by Hailey Gillespie, Austin
Louk and Cassie Bowen, refreshments by the Bowen and Louk
families. The club sang happy
birthday to Tanner LaCross.
The meeting was adjourned by
saying the 4-H motto. Cassie
Bowen, reporter
Library
The library board members
held their regular meeting Oct.
aaron lizer
2×3
16. Notebooks for DVD storage
have been ordered. Charlie
Ward is building a shelf for
the notebooks. LaNell reported
on the Westminister Woods
Annual Inservice she and
Donna Westerman attended.
The magazine list from Ebsco
was reviewed. Shopsmart will
be ordered.
The summer reading workshop will be Feb. 27 in Iola.
Clubs
With the absence of President
A. J. Silvey, Vice President
Ronald McMullen opened the
Oct.17 Lions Club meeting, following a great meal served by
the United Methodist Women.
There were eight members in
attendance. Bill Ulrich, treasurer reported a good crowd
showed up, despite the heavy
rain, to the Alzheimers walk
and auction held at the Iola
square. Prior Lion member
Bill Michael had been a special
contributor to the cause and
fellow Lions wanted to honor
his memory by showing their
support and attendance.
The Colony Lions are still
taking childrens book donations at various locations, one
being Garnett State Savings
Bank of Colony, to be contributed to Kansas Childrens
Hospital; such a worthwhile
cause. The next regular Lions
meeting will be held Nov.7 at 7
p.m. in the Methodist church
basement. All are welcome to
attend. Come be a visitor and
enjoy a hearty dinner.
Jolly Dozen Club members
met at the city hall community
room Oct. 15. Seven members
attended. Claudette Anderson
took a plant to member Virginia
Weatherman. Next years
Colony Day was discussed.
Member Delma Frenchs birthday was Oct. 21 and members
planned to send a card. Debbie
Wools received the hostess
gift. Jane Ward will host the
November meeting at the community room. Hostess Charlene
Tinsley served refreshments in
the Halloween theme.
Around Town
Dalton Luedke celebrated his
9th birthday at a pizza party
in Garnett. Attending were his
grandparents Jerry and Susan
Luedke, Colony, Gene and Anita
Peine, rural Garnett, aunts,
uncles and cousins and his
dad and wife Justin and Angie
Luedke and Daltons brother
Clay.
Mike Wilmoth, Wellington,
son of Don and Kathy Wilmoth,
Iola, former residents of
Colony hit big time briefly.
Mike teaches high school history and American government
at Wellington and is a referee
there also. He was chosen as
one of the replacements for the
National Football League for a
short time. His dad, Don, taught
at Colony and coached football
and basketball several years.
Mike attended school here
through the 6th grade when the
family then moved to Iola.
The drought has not yet been
broken. Oct. 23 (day this went
to paper) marked 144th day
of drought. Some water is in
branches, but subsoil moisture
remains low and springs are
not running. With the rains
received, it is marvelous to
see colors appearing this fall!
Weather has a significant effect
on the vibrancy of fall colors.
This we miss, but some color is
wonderful.
Sympathy is expressed to
Beth Prock and Ruth Caudell
at the death of their mother,
Thelma Manbeck, 96, on Oct. 17
at Windsor Place, Iola. Funeral
services were held Saturday
at Waugh-Yokum & Friskel
Chapel, Iola; burial followed at
LaHarpe Cemetery.
Sympathy is also extended
to Les and Rita Dietrich at
the death of their grandson,
Andy Bennett, 26, Iola. He died
at Overland Park Regional
Medical Center Oct. 15.
Cremation took place. A memorial celebration was held Oct. 20
at the Community Building in
Riverside Park, Iola.
Bill
Feuerborn
anco clerk
Common sense leadership for the 5th District.
A Small Businessman for Small Business
2×5
Bill Feuerborn has spent 40 years building small
businesses. Bill understands what it means to
make a payroll and live within a budget.
Fiscally Responsible
Bill Feuerborn favors a responsible and
realistic tax policy that helps the property owner
and rewards businesses for creating jobs.
Bill believes in a balanced approach that does
not jeopardize our Schools, our Seniors, or our
Public Safety.
Experienced Leader
Kansas House of Representatives 1995-Present
Ranking Member on the House Appropriations
Budget Committee
Perfect attendance record for 16 years
Endorsed by:
Kansas Farm Bureau Kansas Livestock Association Kansans
for Life Kansas State Troopers and Kansas State Fireghters
Associations Kansas Realtors Association and Community Leaders Many More!
On November 6th, vote to return Rep. Bill Feuerborn to
the 5th District in the Kansas House of Representatives!
Paid for by Bill Feuerborn for State Representative, Lynda Feuerborn, Treasurer
ach stroke
4×10
6B
County expenses published
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
(Published in The Anderson County Review, October 30, 2012)
2 bedroom – very clean, central
heat, carport, lawn care. $450
month. (785) 418-5435.
oc9tf
Apartment – Comfortable, 1
bedroom, partially furnished
or unfurnished, $325/month.
References and deposit required.
No smoking, no pets. (785) 4482980.
sp11tf
2 bedroom – 1 bath mobile home
for rent. $300 per month. (913)
669-9599.
oc16t3
Richmond – just remodeled, 4
bedroom, 2 bath, CA/CH, appliances, 1 car garage, $750. Call
(785) 766-5849.
oc23tf
Apartment – furnished, includes
washer and dryer. CH/CA,
clean. No smoking or pets. (758)
448-8676.
oc23tf
Garnett – 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
$400/month; 3 bedroom, 1 bath,
$450/month; 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
$500/month. (785) 204-1585.
oc30t2
2 bedroom – 1 bath, recently
updated house includes stove,
refrigerator, washer, dryer, CH/
CA, $500/month + deposit.
(785) 229-2001.
oc30t3
2 bedroom, 1 bath – 1 car garage
in Garnett, $425/month. No
pets, deposit required. (785) 2041995.
oc30t4*
2 storage – or shop areas
located downtown Garnett.
(785) 448-3968.
oc30t2
One – office area located downtown, Garnett. (785) 448-3968.
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oc30t1
Notice to sell Tate property
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, October 23, 2012)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
Bank of America, N.A.
Plaintiff,
vs.
Bryan M.D. Tate AKA Bryan M Tate AKA Bryan
Tate AKA Bryan Merdith Tate , et al.,
Defendants.
Case No. 12CV26
Division 3
K.S.A. 60
Mortgage Foreclosure
(Title to Real Estate Involved)
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued
by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the
said County of Anderson, State of Kansas, in a
certain cause in said Court Numbered 12CV26,
wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the
undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I
will offer for sale at public auction and sell to
the highest bidder for cash in hand at 10:00 AM,
on 11/14/2012, at the front door of Anderson
County Courthouse, the following described real
estate located in the County of Anderson, State
of Kansas, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL
ESTATE SITUATED IN ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS, TO-WIT: LOT SIXTEEN (16)
IN BLOCK THREE (3) IN THE PARKLANE
ADDITION (1970 REVISED) TO THE CITY OF
GARNETT, KANSAS.
SHERIFF OF ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
Respectfully Submitted,
By: Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542
Sara Knittel, KS # 23624
Kelli N. Breer, KS # 17851
Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office)
12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555
St. Louis, MO 63141
Phone: (314) 991-0255
Fax: (314) 567-8006
Email: sscharenborg@km-law.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
oc23t3
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
AD
1×1
AD
1×3
AD
1×1
AD
1×1
MOBILE HOMES
MOBILE HOMES
1981 – 2 bedroom, 1 bath
mobile home for sale. $4,600.
(913) 669-9599.
oc16t3
CARS & TRUCKS
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Judy Garcia, John Doe (real name unknown)
unknown spouse
Defendant(s).
Case No. 12CV32
Div. No.
K.S.A. 60
Mortgage Foreclosure
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued by the Clerk of the District Court of
ANDERSON County, Kansas, to me the undersigned Sheriff of ANDERSON County, Kansas,
I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to
the highest bidder for cash in hand at the west
door of the ANDERSON County Courthouse at
Garnett, Kansas, at 10:00AM on November 14,
2012, the following real estate:
THE SOUTH HALF (S1/2) OF LOT FOUR
(4) AND FIVE (5) AND THE EAST HALF (E1/2)
OF THE SOUTH HALF (S1/2) OF LOT SIX
(6), AND THE SOUTH HALF (S1/2) OF THE
WEST HALF (W1/2) OF THE VACATED ALLEY
BETWEEN LOTS THREE (3) AND FOUR
(4), BLOCK SIX (6), CHAPMANS ADDITION
TO THE CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS.
more
specifically described as 810 S. Maple St.,
Garnett, KS 66032
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.
Sheriff of ANDERSON County, Kansas
PREPARED AND SUBMITTED BY:
SINGER TARPLEY & JONES, P.A.
Sheldon R. Singer #10915 ssinger@stlaw.net
Linda S. Tarpley #22357 ltarpley@stlaw.net
Kenneth C. Jones #10907 kjones@stlaw.net
Jonah W. Lock # 23330 jlock@stlaw.net
10484 Marty
Overland Park, KS 66212
Phone: (913) 648-6333
Fax: (913) 642-8742
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF
oc23t3
20%30%
CHEAPER
AD
ATVs/MOTORCYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
1996 Yamaha Fazer – ready
to ride. 14,985 miles, full face
helmet, new tires, very quick,
$2,800 OBO. (785) 204-1513.
oc23t1
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Venture Corporation – is
now hiring laborers and CDL
class A and B drivers for the
Anderson County area. Contact
Leslie at (620) 792-5921. Equal
Employment Opportunity.
oc16t3
Oilfield Services – Waterflood
pumpers needed, Garnett area.
Minimum 5 years experience.
Salary negotiable. Call 405-6416538 or 405-810-0900.
oc23t2
KPA HORIZON WEST
2×2
CARS AND TRUCKS
1994 F350 – 7.4 turbo diesel, crew
cab pickup, body good, engine
questionable, $1,000. (785) 4892490 or 448-0319.
oc2tf
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASIFIEDS!
RICHMOND HEALTHCARE 2×2
JOE BORNTRAGER
2×2
RICHMOND
HEALTH
CARE
NURSES
2×2
KPA PLAINS EQUIPMENT
Notice to sell Garcia property 2×2
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, October 23, 2012)
CARS & TRUCKS
LIFECARE OF OZ CNA/
CMA FT
2×3
for OZ
a Rewarding
LIFECARE
CNA
Look ingOF
Career in
2×3
Healthcare?
Due to our recent growth, we are now hiring for:
FT/PT CNAs
Day and Night Shifts Available
of Osawatomie
Competitive pay with shift differential
and excellent benets. Apply Within.
1615 Parker Ave.
Osawatomie
913-755-4165
SF
FARMS
2×3
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Nov 3, 2012 10am
2150 19th Rd, NE,
Waverly, KS
EDGECOMB
AUCTIONS
2×5
KPA QSI
2×4
7B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Why do you think they call it
CREEPSLIST?
Advertise LOCALLY with people you trust.
SERVICES
Piano Lessons – Beginners Adult. Music studio. (913) 755oc2t5*
2350.
AD
1×7.5
RYTTER
1×1
AD
1×1
HELP WANTED
Attend College Online from
Home. *Medical, *Business,
*Criminal Justice, *Hospitality.
Job placement assistance.
Computer available. Financial
Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 888-220-3977 www.
CenturaOnline.com
Can You Dig It? Heavy
Equipment School. 3 wk Training
Program. Backhoes, Bulldozers,
Excavators. Local Job Placement
Asst. VA Benefits Approved. 2
National Certifications. 866-3626497
Exp. Flatbed Drivers: Regional
opportunities now open with
plenty of freight & great pay!
800-277-0212 or primeinc.com
Drivers: No Experience? Class
A CDL Driver Training. We
train and Employ! Experienced
Drivers also Needed! Central
Refrigerated (877) 369-7885
www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.c
om
You got the drive, We have the
Direction OTR Drivers APU
Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass
passenger policy. Newer equipment. 100% No touch. 1-800528-7825
Airline Careers – Become an
Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA
approved training. Financial
aid if qualified – Housing
available. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of
Maintenance 888-248-7449.
SERVICES
SERVICES
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m.,
105 1/2 East 4th Ave., (620) 2282597 or (785) 241-0586. nv21tf
Mobile Home Insurance. We
have great rates on mobile homes
that are less than 15 years old.
Archer Insurance Agency, 118 E.
5th Street, P.O. Box 307, Garnett,
Ks. 66032 (785) 448-3841.
my23tf
Hope Unlimited offers services
to victims of domestic violence
and sexual abuse. Call (620)
365-7566 or Kansas hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
AD
1×1
AD
1×2
LAWN & GARDEN
RIFFEY
Bennets
1×1
1×1
MISC. FOR SALE
MISC
FARM & AG
FARM AND AG
AD
1×1
LOST & FOUND
LOST
Black Angus Heifer – SE Bush
City, Tag 20, (913) 898-6105.
oc16t3*
GARAGE SALES
Beth Ander
son
1×1
Happiness is . . . Garnett United
Methodist Womens Bazaar Tuesday, November 6, 8am to
7pm, 2nd and Oak. Selling frozen casseroles, meals in a cup,
cinnamon rolls, desserts, crafts,
embroidered tea towels, flea market.
oc23t3*
Happiness is . . . California
Nuts & Dried Fruits at Homer
Riffeys. Monday-Saturday,
November 5-10. (785) 489-2384.
3 miles S, 3/4 mile E. of Harris.
oc30t2*
Happiness is . . . All you
can eat pancakes at the
Garnett Rotary Club Pancake
Feed! Tuesday, November 6.
Serving 11-1 and 5-7, United
Methodist Church basement.
oc30t1
Happiness is . . . Playing Texas
Holdem, Friday, November 2, 7
p.m. at the Garnett VFW Post.
oc30t1
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASIFIEDS!
Life Care Center Staff
Cord.
2×3
LAWN & GARDEN
LAWN AND GARDEN
Need leaves removed? Call
Byron Knaus, (785) 204-2911,
448-6777. Mowing, trimming
and etc.
oc16t4*
COMPUTCOMPUTER
ER EXP
1x2WORK
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
NOTICES
NOTICES
Worlds Largest Gun Show
– November 10 & 11 – Tulsa,
OK Fairgrounds. Saturday 86, Sunday 8-4. Wanenmacher
Productions. Free appraisals.
Bring your guns! www.tulsaarmshow.com
Pelvic/Transvaginal Mesh?
Did you undergo transvaginal
placement of mesh for pelvic
organ prolapse or stress urinary incontinence between 2005
and present time? If the patch
required removal due to complications, you may be entitled
to compensations. Call Johnson
Law and speak with female staff
members 1-800-535-5727
Little John Sherwood
AD & Greenhouse
Farm
1×1.5
785-835-7057
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . Jaw BBQ coming soon! Keep your ears open
and eyes glued as great food is
coming soon.
oc2t5*
Happiness is . . . A card shower
for John (Lucky Tiger) Marmons
82nd birthday October 30. PO
Box 3, Garnett.
oc30t1
KPA KS ART AUCTION
2×2
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems, Inc.
is a leading manufacturer of large custom fabricated steel
products for the energy, chemical and aerospace industries.
Products include: pressure vessels, heat exchangers,
nuclear components and gas pipeline equipment.
We are seeking qualied candidates at our Greeley, KS
plant for the position of:
TAYLOR FORGE
2×4
METAL TRADES
Candidates will perform general laborer duties, including
abrasive blasting and painting, Unloading pipe, stock piling,
operation of overhead cranes, wench trucks, and hoisting
equipment. Stock piling, make and install pipe protectors
for shipping.
Position requires up to 6 months of job-related experience.
We offer a
competitive salary and an attractive benets package.
Persons seeking a challenge and opportunity to innovate
are urged to apply in person or send a condential resume
detailing experience and salary history to: hr@tfes.com.
208 N. Iron St., Paola, KS 66071 www.tfes.com AA/EOE
KPA MOSAIC JOB OPP
2×4
KPA GOT PHOTO ID
2×4
DELPHIAN
1X1
AD
1×1
MILLERS
2×4
BECKMAN
3X3
Eight
8B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 30, 2012
LOCAL
Crest announces first quarter honor rolls
Crest Grade School and
Middle School has released its
honor rolls for the first nine
weeks.
Superintendents honor roll
means all As. Principals honor
roll means all As and Bs.
Superintendents Honor Roll
Second Grade – Trevor
Church
Third
Grade – Anna
Hermreck, Marissa Lansdown,
and Tucker Yocham
Fourth Grade – Tyson
Hermreck, Ben Prasko, and
Sharyia Trester.
Fifth Grade – Kimberleigh
Lansdown, Summer Starr.
Sixth
Grade – Jewel
Armstrong, Blake Ashmore,
Regan Godderz, and Camryn
Strickler.
Seventh Grade – Makayla
Jones.
Eighth Grade – Nate Berry,
Laurel Godderz, and Karlee
Hammond.
Principals Honor Roll
Second Grade – Ethan
Godderz, Kamryn Luedke, and
Sydney Stephens
Third Grade – Keaton Davis,
Lindsey Godderz, Tanner
LaCross, June Redman, Lisbeth
Rodriquez, Khloe Utley.
Fourth Grade – Ashton
Bain, Gabe Berry, Brooklynn
Dietrich, Andrew McAdam,
Kobey Miller, Dallas Modlin,
Lizy Young, and Trevor
Weiland.
Fifth Grade – Evan Bain,
Zachary Beckmon, Ridley
Black, Annamarie Culler,
Gregory
Hardwick,
and
Kimberly Madrid.
Sixth Grade – Bryce
Atzbach, Breyanna Benjamin,
Westphalia Junior High
releases honor rolls
Cassie Bowen, Massey Davis,
Hayden Hermreck, and Vicky
Rodriquez.
Seventh Grade – Gage
Adams, Bradlee Bennett, Chad
Classen, Anthony Dunlap,
Austin
Hendrix,
Kaitlyn
LaCross, Dylan McCutchen,
Tavyn Springston, Kadyn Utley,
CJ Ward, and Seth Whitcomb.
Eighth Grade – Taryn
Covey, Miranda Golden, Jordan
Hendrix, Oscar Madrid, Carter
Messenger, Shelby Ramsey, and
Preston Utley.
Westphalia Jr. High has
announced its honor rolls for
the first quarter.
Principals Honor Roll
To be on the Principals
Honor Roll, a student must
have a 4.00 GPA.
Eighth grade Matt
Dieker and Hunter Spencer
Seventh grade Dylan
On August 8, 2012 the Board of Directors of Anderson
County RWD #5 passed a resolution putting the District in a
Water Warning due to worsening drought conditions. All
nonessential water use is to be ELIMINATED including
all water used for outdoor watering; either public or private,
for gardens, lawns, trees, shrubs, plants, parks, golf courses,
playing elds, swimming pools, or other recreational areas;
or the washing of motor vehicles, boats, trailers, or the
exterior of any building or structure.
Due to reservoir conditions and low stream ow the
Water Warning is still in effect.
Please implement some practical conservation
measures in your household if you have not already done so.
Some examples would be:
Emergency drought assistance, reporting deadlines
Emergency drought assistance is available for livestock
producers affected by drought
in Anderson County and all
neighboring counties.
Producers may request assistance in the Anderson County
office by filing an application
for cost-share assistance under
the Emergency Conservation
Program (ECP) from October
15 through November 15, 2012
at their local Farm Service
Agency (FSA). ECP is being
implemented to assist in providing access to water because
of extended period of severe
drought. The damage must be
of such magnitude that it would
be too costly for the producer
to rehabilitate without Federal
assistance.
Participants can receive
cost-share assistance of up to
75 percent of the cost for temporary measures and 50% of
the cost for permanent measures for approved emergency
conservation practices. Contact
your local FSA office for a list
of practices approved for cost
share.
The application process can
be expedited if producers can
provide a signed and dated summary that includes the legal
Aging agency to help with
Medicare Part D enrollment
The East Central Kansas
Area Agency on Aging will be
hosting several outreach events
to assist Medicare beneficiaries with their Medicare Part
D Enrollment for 2013. Those
wanting assistance will have
opportunities to receive help
at events in Garnett during
the month of November at the
Anderson County Hospital and
thru extended business hours at
the agency in Ottawa. A schedule is below.
Open Enrollment takes place
from October 15 to December
7, 2012. All plans will then
become effective January 1,
2013. Everyone should have a
plan comparison done as there
are plans that were bought out
for 2013 by different companies,
several which have changed
their plan name, several that
are no longer in business and
several that are new. Kansas
has 31 plans for 2013. The highest premium is $116.40 and the
lowest premium is $15.00. If
a plan has a deductible it will
range between $325 and $60.
Ottawa
Oct. 30: ECKAAA, 5 p.m.-9
p.m. (Tuesday)
Nov. 7: ECKAAA, open until
6 p.m. (Wednesday)
Nov. 10: ECKAAA, 8:3012:30pm (Saturday)
Nov. 14: ECKAAA, open
until 6 p.m. (Wednesday)
Nov. 21: ECKAAA, open
until 6 p.m. (Wednesday)
Nov. 28: ECKAAA, open
until 6 p.m. (Wednesday)
Dec. 1: ECKAAA, 8:30 a.m.12:30 p.m. (Saturday)
Dec. 5: ECKAAA, open until
6 p.m. (Wednesday)
Garnett
Nov. 3: Moore Family
Board Room, Anderson County
Hospital, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
(Saturday)
Nov. 17: Moore Family
Board Room, Anderson County
Hospital, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
(Saturday)
We are asking that beneficiaries complete a Medicare D
Worksheet and return it to the
office at 117 S Main, Ottawa.
A comparison of the top three
plans will be done and brought
to the outreach event you
will be attending. Call Leslea
Rockers at the ECKAAA office
to get a worksheet and schedule
your visit at one of the outreach
events at 242-7200 or 1-800-6335621.
description of where the action
was taken, mileage from water
source, amount of water hauled,
weight and number of cattle
being watered, evidence and/or
receipts of producers actual
cost incurred. A large volume
of applications are expected
and application requirements
vary on the implemented practice. Any action taken by the
producer to expedite the process will benefit all parties
involved.
DEADLINE REMINDER
Reminder that the deadline
to report grass acreage and
intended use is November 15th
and the deadline to report fall
seeded crops is December 15th.
The adjusted grass reporting deadline has been established by the National office to
coincide with crop insurance
reporting deadlines.
Contact the Anderson
County FSA office at 1-785-4483128 or inquire in person at 111
N. Maple, Garnett, KS 66032.
Turn off the faucet while shaving or brushing your teeth
Only run the dishwasher or washing machine with full loads
Fix all dripping faucets and running toilets
Dont let water run while hand washing dishes
Shorten the length of your showers
Use small amounts of water in the tub for baths
Keep a pitcher of drinking water in the refrigerator instead
of letting the faucet run until water is cool
Dont give up on us,
sandysSimple
quickSimons
shop
2x3will be opening soon!
dunns
2×4
P.O. Box 85
Fittstown, OK 74842
800-433-2950
www.dunnsshfarm.com
Delivery of Black Crappie, Channel Catsh,
Bass, Hybrid Bluegill, Coppernose Bluegill,
Redear Bream, Fathead Minnows,
and Triploid Grass Carp
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
NOW AVAILABLE FOR POND & LAKE STOCKING!
We furnish hauling containers! Live delivery Guaranteed!
Discounts/Special Deliveries on large orders!
Thurs. Nov. 8
Wed. Nov 7
8:30-9:30AM
9:00-10:00AM
GEM Farm Center
East Wilson Recycle
Garnett, N. Hwy 59
Ottawa, 2202 E. Wilson
Turtle Traps Fish Feeders Fish Traps Decorative
Fountains Aerators Windmill Aerators Vegitation
Control Pond Fertilizers Floating Docks
AD
2×2
To place an order or for more information
call one of our Aquatic Consultants, your local
dealer, or email sales@dunnsshfarm.com
Vote
Mon-Fri 7-6
Sat 8-4 CST
Fax: 1-580-777-2899
Republican
anco republicans
4×10 on November 6
sonic
2×4
with the
Light the Night First Christian
Church!
rst christian church
Wednesday, October 31 from 6 – 8pm
2×4
Decorate your car trunk or truck
bed and pass out candy, or bring
your children to seek out treasure
from the decorated trunks of those
participating.
Trunk-R-Treat with us!
2nd & Walnut
785-448-3452
OMalley and Bethany Powls
Teachers Honor Roll
To be on the Teachers
Honor Roll, a student must
have a 3.5 to 3.99 GPA.
Eighth grade Trevor
McDaniel, Grace Urquhart
and Ben Willard
Seventh grade Adina
Ratzlaff, Cameron Shilling

