Anderson County Review — October 7, 2014
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from October 7, 2014. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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 2014 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Garnett VFW
honors POW/MIAs
Sports action…
Crest wins.
See Page 7A.
See page 8A
E-statements & Internet Banking
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A memorial to recognize
military veterans from Anderson
County will be unique, organizers
say.
A committee planning to build a
veterans memorial on the lawn of the
Anderson County Courthouse met a
couple of weeks ago to discuss plans
for the memorial. The committee has
been working on the project for about
three years without much result, but
committee members were able to
accomplish quite a bit in the recent
meeting, Phyllis Gettler said. She is
SINCE 1865 149th Year, No. 11
(785) 448-3121
Its our 150th
in 2015!
Get ready for a
birthday bash.
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CELEBRATING A 150 YEAR NEWS HERITAGE
1865-2015
Member FDIC 1899-2012
Veterans memorial
plans take shape
After three years of delays,
memorial design and
fundraising efforts begin
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
October 7, 2014
(785) 448-3111
Crest Homecoming Celebrated
Anderson Countys clerk and serves
on the committee.
Part of the delay had been waiting
for preliminary design sketches from
local artisan Leon Lickteig. At the
recent meeting, Lickteig presented
some rough hand-drawn sketches
that would feature a separate wall
monument for each war to include
veterans names; a centered design
on the floor and a wall in the back
to depict all branches of military
service. Three flags for the U.S.,
Kansas and MIA/POW also would
be featured in the memorial.
Its not going to be a little thing.
Theres a lot to it, Gettler said. We
want Anderson Countys memorial
to be original. We dont want it to look
like anyone elses.
SEE MEMORIAL ON PAGE 2A
Mayor wants to keep
trucks off Park Road
Damage to street is unfair,
costly for city taxpayers,
Garnett mayor says
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Mayor Preston Peine is
determined to keep heavy trucks off
Park Road to minimize damage to
the road surface. Exactly how that
could be possible, especially without
the cooperation of county commissioners, remains to be seen.
Peine pressed Garnett City
Manager Joyce Martin and staff to
study the matter and find some sort
of alternative to keep heavy trucks off
the city street. But just about every
option, Martin said, is either very difficult to manage or impossible without help from county commissioners.
Anderson County Commissioners
have said they do not feel truck restrictions are necessary, and their portion
of the road is fine.
City leaders say that Park Road
was never designed to handle heavy
truck traffic. The road frequently suffers damage, and fixing the damage
can cost the city tens of thousands
to hundreds of thousands of dollars
each year. If the city were to replace
the road with a better-designed base
to handle heavy trucks, the price tag
SEE ROAD ON PAGE 3A
City warns big trees will be
targeted in electric upgrade
Trees in way as Walnut
Street gets upgrade in
poles, new wiring
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Some city residents are
in for a shocking surprise, as an electrical upgrade on Walnut Street will
mean several large, old trees need to
come down.
Garnett City Manager Joyce
Martin said she expects some prop-
erty owners will be upset to learn
that some of their trees will be cut
to make way for the upgrade, but she
assures residents the improvements
will be worth it.
City electric and street crews
already have been prepping Walnut
Street for the change, which is
expected to be completed by spring.
City crews will do much of the work,
but an electrical contractor must
complete some of the more technical
aspects. The city may also need to
SEE ELECTRIC ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-07-2014 / Dane Hicks
Rene Rodriguez and Emily Wyant were crowned king and queen of Crest Fall Homecoming Friday night. The
Lancers won the homecoming matchup against Elk Valley 60-8.
Variety of events set for this weekend
Car race revival, art show,
Second Saturdays event
all on tap for Oct. 11
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT For the past several
months, city tourism and business
leaders have focused on bringing people to Garnett on the second Saturday
of the month for various events and
activities.
This month, the second Saturday in
October features a triple threat, with
a classic car event, art tour and the
usual Second Saturday music and
entertainment fare, with a fall twist.
There will be lots of events Saturday,
Oct. 11, to keep residents, visitors – and
even their dogs – entertained.
Second Saturdays
Second Saturdays in Garnett has
become the time to find bargains for
shopping and dining, as well as art,
music and more. An afternoon Golden
Ticket drawing downtown gives shoppers the chance to win $50 in gold dollars.
This months event features fall
festival events starting at 10 a.m. at
ReFined-ReCherished, where a miniature pumpkin patch will be set up.
Kids can decorate small pumpkins
until 1 p.m., then head to the Anderson
County Courthouse lawn at 2 p.m. for
a variety of activities including pumpSEE EVENTS ON PAGE 8A
Area school districts lose students
Enrollment down at
2 of 3 districts; only
Central Heights up
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-07-2014 / Vickie Moss
People standing along U.S. 59 highway Sunday afternoon hold signs against abortion as part of the
annual Life Chain, organized by Kansans for Life. Organizers said the event was the largest single
demonstration in Kansas, with tens of thousands participating across the state.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Central Heights was the only
area school district to show an
increase in enrollment this year
but even then the increase was
slight, with just a couple more
students this fall compared to
last year.
Area superintendents have
been prepared in recent years
to lose students, a trend in
rural districts in the area. But
until this year, the past couple
of years brought surprising
increases. When the annual
enrollment count was conducted on Sept. 22, the numbers
fell about as superintendents
expected.
State funding to schools is
based on the number of students enrolled, and districts
must determine how to estimate enrollment when preparing the budget for the coming
school year. Districts can submit enrollments based on this
years estimated enrollment,
the previous years enrollment
or an average of the past three
years. Local districts feared a
series of declining enrollments
hurt the budget in light of other
cuts to some state and federal
programs, as well as uncertainty about continued school funding by the state legislature.
USD 365, with schools in
Garnett, Greeley, Westphalia
and Mont Ida, saw 1,062 stu-
dents attending school in the
district, a decrease of 55 students compared to the 1,117 students reported Sept. 20, 2013.
The district had been expecting
1,090 students this year, but the
actual enrollment fell short of
expectations by 28. All schools
reported fewer students than
expected, with Westphalia
reporting the biggest decrease.
Officials expected an enrollment at Westphalia of 99 students; actual enrollment was
85, a difference of 14 students.
Garnett Elementary School
lost 13 students compared to
expectations, with 420 students
currently enrolled. Anderson
County Jr./Sr. High School
stayed fairly consistent, with
SEE ENROLLMENT ON PAGE 2A
Custom printed graduation announcements – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS
IN BRIEF
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The Anderson County Historical
Society October meeting has
been rescheduled for October 23
at 6 p.m., rather than 6:30 p.m.,
at the home of Jonas Borntrager,
at 19916 NW 1600 Road (about 6
miles west of Garnett). They will
prepare the meal for our meeting
($15 per plate) and provide the
program.
ECKAN HOUSING LIST
ECKAN Housing will be closing the
waiting list for Section 8 Housing
assistance applications effective
October 10, 2014. Applications
for other ECKAN programs are
being accepted.
VOTER REGISTRATION
Voter registration for the Nov. 4
election ends at 5 p.m. on Oct.
14. Contact the Anderson County
Clerks Office for more information or to register to vote. (785)
448-6841.
ACJSHS MILITARY GRADS
Anderson County Jr./Sr. High
School is creating a display to
honor ACHS and Garnett High
School graduates currently serving on active duty in the U.S.
military. The school would like the
name, year of graduation, current
duty station and a picture for the
dipslay at ACJSHS. The information may be left at ACJSHS or
emailed to bbunnel@usd365.org.
Please contact the school at (785)
448-3115 for more information.
VFW BREAKFAST
Garnett VFW will have a breakfast from 7-10 a.m. Saturday, Oct.
11, at the post. Menu includes biscuits and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage and eggs.
GREELEY CITYWIDE SALE
St. Johns Hall and Greeley
Citywide Garage Sales will be 7
a.m. to ? Saturday, Oct. 11.
MEMORIAL BRICKS
Inscribed bricks are being sold for
the Anderson County Veterans
Memorial and will be used in
the creation of the walking area.
Bricks can be inscribed with
whatever names the purchaser
desires. A minimum $25.00 donation is requested. Forms for the
bricks are available in the office of
the Anderson County Clerk.
MEMORIAL NAMES
The Anderson County Veterans
Memorial Committee is requesting the communitys assistance
in obtaining a precise and correct
list of the veterans who have
served our country from Anderson
County. Lists from the different
conflicts are available in the office
of the Anderson County Clerk for
review and revision.
KANSAS NOTABLES
The State Library of Kansas has
announced 15 books featuring
quality titles with wide public
appeal, either written by Kansans
or about a Kansas-related topic.
The Kansas Notable Book List
is the only honor for Kansas
books by Kansans. A committee
of Kansas Center for the Book
(KCFB) Affiliates, Fellows, librarians and authors of previous
Notable Books identifies these
titles from among those published
the previous year, and the State
Librarian makes the selection
for the final List. An awards ceremony was held at the Kansas
Book Festival, September 13, to
recognize the talented Notable
Book authors. Throughout the
award year, KCFB promotes all
the titles on that years List electronically, at literary events,and
among librarians and booksellers. For more information about
the Kansas Notable Book project, call 785-296-3296, visit www.
kslib.info/notablebooks or email
infodesk@library.ks.gov. These
books are available for checkout
from the Garnett Public Library.
POLITICAL FORUM
A Political Forum will be offered by
Garnett BPW, Anderson County
Farm Bureau Women and the
Garnett Rotary Club. The forum
will be Thursday, October 16, at
7p.m. at the ACJSHS Auditorium.
COMMUNITY DINNERS
The First Christian Church of
Garnett will offer Community
Dinners on Oct. 14 and 28, Nov.
11 and 25, and Dec. 9 and 23.
Dinners are served from 5 p.m. to
6:30 p.m. Donations accepted.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY
COMMISSION
SEPTEMBER 22, 2014
Commissioner Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM on
September 22, 2014 at the County
Commission Room.
Attendance:
James K. Johnson, Absent: Eugene
Highberger, Present: Jerry Howarter,
Present. The pledge of allegiance was
recited, Minutes of the previous meeting
were approved as presented.
Emerald Hill
Hugh Bogle, KDOT, met with the commission. Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
was also present.
Hugh requested
the county consider closing a portion
of Colorado Rd from Hwy 31 to the
intersection of 2500 Rd. The state feels
there are liability issues due to the sight
distance to the east turning onto Hwy
31. Lester stated he was opposed to
closing the road. Hugh stated the state
would consider blacktopping the portion of 2500 Rd to Hwy 31 if the county
closed Colorado Rd. Commission tabled
decision.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor met
with the commission. He has a temporary employee who he hired to fill in for
an employee on work comp. He plans
to keep the temporary until the end
of October to make sure the full time
employee is able to continue working.
Hospital
Vicki Mills, ACH Financial Director and
Adam Wiederholt, Turner Construction
met with the commission. Adam reported they are looking at substantial completion on December 5th. There will be
a ribbon cutting on January 17th, patient
moving will happen on January 29th.
Vicki reported on the cash that is still
available to finish up the project.
HVAC
Dan Harden, BG Consultants met
with the commission. Discussion was
held on the bridge by Kincaid that the
state is preparing to replace. Dan presented a contract with BG Consultants
for them to oversee the installation of a
new HVAC system for the courthouse.
Discussion was held on the proposal
and the different stages of construction.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM due
to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
Donald E Whitcomb And Wanda R
Whitcomb To Donald E Whitcomb And
Wanda R Whitcomb, N2 Ne4 & E2 Nw4
22-21-21 & Se4 Se4 15-21-21 Interest In
Oil & Gas Lease Only.
Christopher H Cygan And Amy K
Cygan To Creekside Properties Llc, Lot
22 Blk 22 City Of Garnett; & East 97 Of
Lot 13 Blk 2 Whiteford Addition To City
Of Garnett; & Lot 13 & West 4 Lot 4 Blk
70 City Of Garnett.
Aaron L Bowman And Kimra S
Bowman To William L Bauman And
Janae Heck, E2 Se4 Se4 Sw4 7-21-18.
Lloyd L Stever Trustee To Brant T
Mcghee And Danelle N Mcghee, E2 Se4
14-23-18.
Joe A Stevens Iii To Doug Calahan,
Beg At Swcor Se4 Sw4 10-23-19,
Thence North 660, Thence East 330,
Thence South 660, Thence West 330
To Pob.
Tammy Denise Stever And Scott
Mantooth To Kacie Nilges And Kevin
Nilges, E2 Lots 1 & 2 Blk 44 City Of
Colony.
CIVIL CASES FILED
U.S. National Bank vs. Garen A.
Honn, Christie L. Honn, John Doe, Mary
Doe, mortgage foreclosure, $81,818.07
plus costs and interest.
Employers Mutual Casualty Company,
Wichita Branch, vs. TI Enterprises, Inc.,
and Twyla Beinhorn; breech of contract, asking for an amount in excess of
$75,000 plus costs and interest.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Wells Fargo Bank NA vs. Raymond K.
Hess, dismissed.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Miami County Medical Center vs.
Debra L. Johnston, asking for $3,080.84
plus costs and interest.
DeMint Anesthesia Services LLC vs.
Janci L. Mortell, asking for $900.90 plus
costs and interest.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Anderson County Landfill c/o
Engineers Office vs. Paul Scobee dba
Hometown Heating and Cooling, dismissed.
SMALL CLAIMS FILED
John Pollock vs. Ricky Lee Sumner,
asking for $500 plus costs and interest.
Richard Hiestand vs. Kathryn M.
Schulte, asking for $1,476 plus costs
and interest.
SMALL CLAIMS RESOLVED
Beard Propane vs. Thomas Buckle,
judgment filed.
Lybarger Oil Inc. vs. Timothy Cornet,
dismissed.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Samantha Lynn Clark vs. Brian
Bradford Wayne Clark, dismissed.
Sheila L. Stifter vs. Jeffrey W. Stifter,
dismissed.
State of Kansas SRS vs. Patrick
David Olsen, dismissed.
State of Kansas SRS vs. Jeremy
Scott Thomas, dismissed.
Secretary of SRS vs. Kari R. Malone,
dismissed.
Secretary of SRS vs. Joseph E.
Malone, dismissed.
Sarah Jean Dionne vs. Robert Dionne,
dismissed.
Julia Ann Hurlock vs. Benjamin L.
Kinder, dismissed.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding:
William Robert Ussery, $171 fine.
Timothy Arthur Erickson, $152 fine.
Levi Joseph Spratt, $153 fine.
Tara E. Gray, $222 fine, license suspended.
Rebecca Lynn Stevens, $141 fine,
license suspended.
Sara Ann Weiner, $141, license suspended.
Carey J. Webb, $158 driving without
valid license and $81 speeding fine,
license suspended.
Danielle Louise Bigler, $201 fine.
Wesley Todd Ahring, $183 fine.
Nita Romanelli Foley, $177 fine.
Mary J. Fitts, $153 fine.
Nemanja Popic, $183 fine.
Abby Shae Weaver, $153 fine.
Janice Anette Varvel, $153 fine.
Kellee Nicole Woods, $231 fine.
Brooke M. Smith, $183 fine.
Angela Dawn Wood, $207 fine.
Failure to wear seatbelt:
Denise T. Farmer, $10 fine.
Wyatt Lane Hulett, $10 fine.
Ashley L. Faries, $10 fine.
Other:
Troy N. Spencer, disobey traffic control device, $183 fine.
Max Ansel Hopkins, improper parking
$141 fine.
Leslie Jo Willis, child passenger safety restraint violation, $237 fine, license
suspended.
Derek K. Hilliard, failure to carry
license, no liability insurance, $618 fine,
license suspended.
Peter Odion Okonofua, no liability
insurance, $408 fine, license suspended.
Regina Lynn Brown, improper parking, $153 fine, license suspended.
Jerald Wayne Apperson, transporting
an open container, $153 fine.
Dean E. Oliver, no liability insurance,
$408 fine.
Jennifer Jo Morrow, giving a worthless check, two counts, dismissed.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Cody James Meeker, two counts
criminal threat.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
OFFICE
Offense Report:
On Sept. 14, a report of criminal damage to property and theft were reported
in the 28800 block of SE Hwy. 59. A
chain was reported damaged and three
spools of barbed wire and 20 metal Tposts were reported stolen.
GARNETT POLICE
DEPARTMENT
Offense Reports:
On Sept. 29, 400 block of South
Maple Street, Short Stop reported theft
of two Reeses Big Cups candy bars.
On Sept. 27, 1100 block of South
Walnut, a report was made of interference with law enforcement and disorderly conduct.
On Sept. 27, 100 block of East Fifth
Avenue, a report was made of criminal
threat.
On Sept. 28, 100 block of West Fifth
Avenue, Tradewinds reported theft of a
bottle of fireball whiskey. It was recovered.
Arrests:
Chelsea Chambers, Garnett, was
arrested on a warrant at 3:25 p.m. Sept.
25.
Cody Meeker, Garnett, was arrested
on suspicion of disorderly conduct; fighting at 8:45 p.m. Sept. 27, and on suspicion of criminal threat at 9:45 p.m. Sept.
27.
Tony Gettler, Garnett, was arrested
on suspicion of interference with law
enforcement, disorderly conduct at 8:45
p.m. Sept. 27.
Jesse Bettinger, Garnett, was arrested on suspicion of theft at 12:43 a.m.
Sept. 28.
Eric Weems, Garnett, was arrested
on suspicion of aggravated battery at
9:42 p.m. Sept. 18.
Stephen Hyden, Garnett, was arrested on a warrant at 4:18 p.m. Sept. 22.
JAIL LOG
Crystal Michele Hall, 34, Iola, was
arrested Sept. 25 on two counts of probation violation. Bond set at $5,000.
Starrett Miles Burrough, 37, Iola, was
arrested Sept. 25 on a warrant. Bond set
at $10,000.
Chelsea Cheyanne Chambers, 18,
Garnett, was arrested Sept. 25 on a
warrant.
Harley Nicholas Crook, 23, Garnett,
was arrested Sept. 26 for failure to
appear. Bond set at $10,000.
Cody James Meeker, 21, Garnett,
was arrested Sept. 27 on suspicion
of disorderly conduct, fighting, criminal
threat. Bond set at $5,000.
Tony Benjamin Gettler, 51, Garnett,
was arrested Sept. 27 on suspicion
of disorderly conduct, fighting, interference with law enforcement. Bond set at
$1,000.
Gregory Kent Shields, 36, LaHarpe,
was arrested Sept. 28 on suspicion of
DUI. Bond set at $1,000.
Jesse David Bettinger, 23, Garnett,
was arrested Sept. 28 on suspicion of
theft. Bond set at $1,050.
Barton Alexander Fromme, 42,
Lenexa, was arrested Sept. 29 on a
probation violation. Bond set at $5,000.
Michael Allen Mills, 39, Garnett, was
arrested Sept. 29 on suspicion of giving
a worthless check.
Thomas Richard DesJardin, 36,
Chanute, was arrested Sept. 29 for failure to appear. Bond set at $1,000.
Paul Vee Claytor, 48, Mound City,
was arrested Sept. 30 by Linn County for
probation violation.
David Taylor Griffith, 26, Pleasanton,
was arrested Sept. 30 by Linn County for
probation violation.
Daniel Todd VanNorman, 27, Garnett,
was arrested Sept. 30 for failure to
appear. Bond set at $10,000.
Malcolm Lee Davis, 26, Osawatomie,
was arrested Oct. 1 by Miami County for
aggravated indecent liberties with a child
and aggravated criminal sodomy. Bond
set at $250,000.
Brett Allen Emery, 29, Paola, was
arrested Oct. 1 by Miami County for
probation violation.
Richard Paul Martin, 53, Bucyrus,
was arrested Oct. 1 by Miami County for
a warrant.
Frank Anthony Kuhl, 65, Drexel, Mo.,
was arrested Oct. 1 by Miami County for
a warrant. Bond set at $2,500.
Cynthia Lynn Sill, 57, Olathe, was
arrested Oct. 1 by Linn County for probation violation.
Ashley Dawn Rose, 31, Blue Mound,
was arrested Oct. 1 by Linn County
for suspicion of burglary. Bond set at
$25,000.
Patrick Alan Butler, 33, Osawatomie,
was arrested Oct. 1 by Miami County for
a warrant.
Terry Ray Tufnell, 23, Paola, was
arrested Oct. 1 by Miami County on suspicion of forgery. Bond set at $5,000.
Sept. 29 for Anderson County. Bond set
at $10,000.
Dustin Johnson was booked into jail
on April 16 for Anderson County, bond
set at $10,000.
Stephen Hyden was booked into jail
on September 22 for Anderson County,
bond set at $10,000.
Aaron Lehman was booked into jail
on July 28 for Anderson County, bond
set at $5,000.
Joshua Heubach was booked into jail
on June 26 for Anderson County, bond
set at $5,000.
Jarrad Nash was booked into jail on
September 19 for Anderson County for a
30-day writ.
Carl Hermreck was booked into jail
on September 12 for Anderson County,
bond set at $1,000.
Chad Mueller was booked into jail
on July 29 for Anderson County, for a
236-day writ, release date February 22,
2015.
Joseph Daulton was booked into jail
on August 22 for Anderson County, bond
set at $20,000.
Zebulon Akes was booked into jail on
August 1 for Anderson County, bond set
at $40,000.
George Voorhees was booked into jail
on September 18 for Anderson County,
bond set at $100,000.
Garry Wilson was booked into jail
on September 22 for Anderson County,
here until next court date.
FARM-INS
Derick Hollon was booked into jail
Sept. 28 for Anderson County for a 12day writ.
Cody Meeker was booked into jail
Sept. 27 for Anderson County. Bond set
at $5,000.
Daniel Van Norman was booked inot
jail Oct. 1 for Anderson County. Bond set
at $10,000.
Starrett Burrough was booked into jail
Sept. 25 for Anderson County. Bond set
at $10,000.
Harley Crook was booked into jail
Sept. 26 for Anderson County. Bond set
at $10,000.
Barton Fromme was booked into jail
David Griffith was booked into jail
Sept. 30 for Linn County.
Thomas Ricky was booked into jail
Sept. 24 for Miami County.
Richard Martin was booked into jail
Oct. 1 for Miami County.
Terry Tufnell was booked into jail Oct.
1 for Miami County.
Brett Emery was booked into jail Oct.
1 for Miami County.
Steven Eastwood was booked into jail
Sept. 24 for Miami County.
Paul Claytor was booked into jail
Sept. 30 for Linn County.
Cynthia Sill was booked into jail Sept.
30 for Linn County.
Ashley Rose was booked into jail Oct.
1 for Linn County.
Jamie Sosa was booked into jail Sept.
24 for Miami County.
Malcolm Davis was booked into jail
Oct. 1 for Miami County.
Patrick Butler was booked into jail
Oct. 1 for Miami County.
Frank Kuhl was booked into jail Oct. 1
for Miami County.
Daniel Long was booked into jail on
September 19 for Linn County.
Chad Roy was booked into jail on
September 11 for Miami County.
Christopher Olcott was booked into
jail on September 11 for Miami County.
Demetrius Cornelius was booked into
jail on September 2 for Linn County.
Jason Black was booked into jail on
September 2 for Linn County.
Gary Colston was booked into jail on
September 19 for Miami County.
Douglas May was booked into jail on
September 23 for Miami County.
Judy Skinner was booked into jail on
September 19 for Linn County.
John Simons was booked into jail on
February 24 for Linn County.
come a significant decrease
in 2011. Crest has 67 students
enrolled at the high school, and
graduated just 11 seniors last
year. This years incoming kindergarten class is 14 students.
Central Heights raised fulltime equivalent enrollment
by 2.5 students, up to 552.5.
Superintendent Jim White said
the biggest increase came in
second grade, which already
was a large class, with 47 students compared to 35 last year.
The elementary school had to
add a third second grade class
to accommodate the large class.
However, the district graduated
40 students last year and added
just 28 kindergarteners this
year, which could be significant
for the districts future.
JAIL ROSTER
MEMORIAL… ENROLLMENT…
FROM PAGE 1A
Lickteig hopes to start construction in the spring.
The committee also discussed
key issues needed before the
memorial can go forward. One
of those issues involves fundraising; the other considers just
what types of veterans should
be included in the memorial.
Anderson County commissioners have set aside a tenth of
a mill against property taxes to
raise money for the memorial.
Currently, theres about $53,000
in that fund but it will take
considerably more than that
to complete the monument,
Gettler said. The cement work
alone is expected to cost nearly
$30,000, she said.
To raise money for the project, the committee will offer
inscribed bricks or tiles to be
placed near the memorial.
Anyone who is interested in
purchasing a brick can do so
for a donation of at least $25.
The bricks can be ordered at
the county clerks office in the
courthouse. The clerks office
has forms that will allow purchasers to write what he or
she would like as the inscription. Gettler estimated about
3,000 bricks would be used at
the memorial site, and more
could be added as a walkway if
needed.
The other issue who should
be honored by the memorial
has been one of the more
controversial discussions about
the project. Some have argued
the memorial should recognize
all veterans who served, while
others feel it should honor only
those who died while in service.
Gettler said the committee
has decided to honor all veterans who lived in Anderson
County at the time of service.
However, including all veterans
will be difficult, because its
possible someone could be left
off or someone might want to
include a veteran who served
in a war and later moved to the
county. Gettler said the committee welcomes public input
to help resolve questions.
For more information, contact Gettler at (785) 448-6841.
FROM PAGE 1A
457 students enrolled. The
districts pre-school program
was the only class to show an
increase, with 18 students compared to an expected enrollment of 17.
The district graduated 67
students in 2013, a relatively
small class. This years incoming kindergarten class is 72,
about average for class sizes in
the district.
Crest also reported a slight
decrease from last year with a
full-time equivalent count of
198.5, down by nine students
from last year. The district saw
slight enrollment increases in
2013 and 2012, but had to over-
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
business directory
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×8.5
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN
MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
(785) 448-5441
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
Sell your stuff on
Let the Review do
all the work for you!
785-448-3121 or
800-683-4505
DC Solutions LLC
Foundation &
Drainage Repair
Licensed & Insured
785-448-3056
Jo Wolken – Registered Representative
Securities offered through H.D. Vest Investment Services ,
Member SIPC. Advisory Services offered through H.D. Vest
Advisory Services 6333 N. State Highway 161, Fourth Floor,
Irving, TX 75038, 972-870-6000
305 N. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
(913) 256-9163
www.facebook.com/DC Solutions LLC
www.dcsolutions@osawatomie.com
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
FREIDLINE
January 15, 1974-September 11, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published October 7, 2014
Scott Eugene Freidline, age 40,
died Thursday, Sept. 11, 2014. He
was born Jan. 15, 1974, at Kansas
City, Kan., to Dale and Anita Fisher
Freidline.
He was preceded in death by his
mother, Anita.
Survivors include two chil-
dren, Miranda Freidline and
Ryan Freidline; his father, Dale;
and three brothers, Brad and Kurt
Freidline, and David Sweat; and
his grandmother, Bertha Freidline,
Garnett.
Memorial service was Monday,
Sept. 15, 2014, at the Schneider
Funeral Home and Crematory,
Pleasanton Chapel. Inurnment was
at the Garnett Cemetery.
BENNETT
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published October 7, 2014
Wilma Bennett Sloan, age 78, of
Garnett, died Sunday, October 5,
2014 at the St. Lukes South Hospital
in Overland Park.
Funeral services will be held at
10 a.m., Friday, October 10, at the
First Baptist Church in Garnett.
Burial will follow in the Springfield
Cemetery, rural Garnett. The family will greet friends from 6-8 p.m.,
Thursday evening at Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service.
ROAD…
Notice of mortgage foreclosure on Ward property
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 30, 2014)
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
NOTICE OF SUIT
THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the abovenamed defendants and the unknown heirs,
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
creditors and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants;
the unknown officers, successors, trustees,
creditors and assigns of any defendants that
are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators,
devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and
assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians,
conservators and trustees of any defendants
that are minors or are under any legal disability;
and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns
of any person alleged to be deceased, and all
other persons who are or may be concerned.
You are notified that a Petition has been
filed in the District Court of Anderson County,
Kansas, praying to foreclose a real estate mort-
Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae), a corporation organized and existing
under the laws of the United States of America
Plaintiff,
vs.
Becky E. Ward; Unknown Heirs of Becky E.
Ward, deceased; John Doe (Tenant/Occupant);
Mary Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Unknown Spouse,
if any, of Becky E. Ward; Fred Manns; Dorothy
Manns; Jim Manns; Toni Manns; Charlene
Bennett; Bob Bennett; Cynthia Chadwick; Dale
Chadwick; Joe Manns; Connie Manns; Mike
Ward; Unknown Spouse, if any, of Mike Ward;
Patricia Ward; Unknown Spouse, if any, of
Patricia Ward,
Defendants.
Case No. 14CV21
FROM PAGE 1A
could top $500,000. Peine said
he doesnt believe it is fair to
ask city residents to shoulder
the repair or replacement debt
caused by heavy trucks, especially if there are alternatives to
keep the trucks off the road.
Instead of using Park Road,
heavy trucks on U.S. 169 can
travel several blocks south to
Sixth Avenue, a business highway route designed to handle
such vehicles. Trucks can travel
on Sixth Avenue to U.S. 59, or
can travel even farther south
to the roundabout where U.S.
169 and 59 meet. However, Park
Road is often seen as a shortcut,
especially for trucks headed to
and from the Anderson County
Sale barn at the intersection of
Park Road and U.S. 59.
The city must maintain all
of Park Road from U.S. 59 east
to the cemetery road (Nebraska
Road). The city also maintains
the south half of Park Road
from the cemetery road to
Catalpa Street, while the county
maintains the north half. The
city can only restrict traffic in
portions where it controls both
sides of the road. That means
if city leaders want to restrict
truck traffic, they cant do so
until just west of the cemetery
road. At that point, however,
there is no place for westbound
trucks to turn around.
City commissioners initially
wanted a sign that would restrict
traffic just west of the cemetery
road, and wondered if they could
install a warning sign near the
intersection of Park Road and
U.S. 169 so truck drivers would
know about the coming restriction before they left the highway
or before they passed Catalpa.
But, again, in order to post such
a sign, they would need approval
from the county.
Martin said its possible that
the design of Olive Street, which
connects to Park Road just west
of the cemetery road, could handle heavy trucks. Such trucks
could be diverted on Olive to
Sixth Avenue. However, such
a diversion would cause many
concerns for city residents.
Olive is a very residential street,
and trucks would be forced to
drive through a school zone and
over railroad tracks before making a sharp right turn onto Sixth
Avenue.
Commissioner
Gordon
Blackie said he was concerned
that any possible solution to the
problem would only create more
problems.
Theres going to be some
angst in the beginning, but word
will circulate, he said.
Student government representative Asa Young pointed out
that any truck driver who was
forced to go that route would
likely only do it once or twice
before seeking an alternative.
Young and commissioner
Greg Gwin said they were concerned how the change would
affect business at the sale barn,
but city attorney Terry Solander
said trucks can still get to the
sale barn by driving about a mile
or so farther to Sixth Avenue or
the roundabout.
I think we create a problem
if, for no other reason, youd
have a lot of angry truck drivers, Solander said.
In addition to the logistics
of where to restrict traffic,
city commissioners also must
consider how to enforce those
restrictions. One city police officer has been trained to enforce
weight restrictions for large
vehicles, but there is no easy
place to pull over a heavy truck.
Park Road features little to no
shoulders, with residential areas
along most of the road. City
leaders could prohibit trucks
based on the number of axles
rather than weight, but that also
would be difficult to enforce.
The restrictions likely wouldnt
affect delivery vehicles to businesses on Park Road, because of
exceptions already written into
city laws, Solander said.
Martin said she and staff
would continue to research the
matter, and report back to the
commission at a later meeting. She also said she would
continue to talk to county commissioners to seek some sort of
compromise.
ELECTRIC…
FROM PAGE 1A
hire someone to cut the tops of
trees that are too large for the
citys bucket trucks to reach.
The job includes moving
electric poles from the east side
of the road to the west side,
and stringing new wire. The
old lines have lost significant
insulation and copper wires
are much heavier, making the
lines more susceptible to power
outages during wind and ice
storms. The lines along Walnut
Street are one of the citys main
arterial routes from the city
power plant.
The upgrade is expected
to reduce power outages dur-
ing storms and increase efficiency in the citys electrical
system. Martin said its especially important to upgrade the
system for the new Anderson
County Hospital, because the
new system will provide an
emergency loop to better protect the hospital from power
outages.
Although several trees
along the citys easement will
need to be cut to make way for
the changes, Martin said the
improvement is important to
the city.
Anytime we can improve
the system and do most of the
work ourselves, thats a good
thing, she said.
Through October 31st
Peckhams
peckham
Pumpkin Patch
2×4
Celebrating
Our 26th
Season!
Your $5 admission includes:
the hay maze, tube slides, bounce
house, rubber duck race, new bean
bag games and the hay wagon ride!
(kids 4 & under free)
From Garnett take Hwy. 59 north to
John Brown Rd. at Princeton. Go east on
John Brown 8 miles to Vermont Rd., then
go 2 miles north of Rantoul.
1-800-296-6745
FOR A RECORDED UPDATE
OPEN
Saturdays 10-6
Sundays Noon-6
3A
REMEMBRANCES
gage on the following described real estate:
Beginning at a point 712 feet West
and 60 feet North of the Southeast corner
of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of Section
Twenty-five (25), Township Twenty (20) South,
Range Nineteen (19) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, thence running North 140 feet, thence
West 115 feet, thence South 140 feet, thence
East 115 feet to the place of beginning
ALSO DESCRIBED AS:
Beginning at a point 712 feet West
and 60 feet North of the Southeast corner
of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of Section
Twenty-five (25), Township Twenty (20) South,
Range Nineteen (19) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian in Anderson County, Kansas, thence
running North 140 feet, thence West 115 feet,
thence South 140 feet, thence East 115 feet
to the place of beginning, except that part in
streets and roads, commonly known as 613
West 4th Avenue, Garnett, KS 66032 (the
Property)
and all those defendants who have not
otherwise been served are required to plead
to the Petition on or before the 10th day
of November, 2014, in the District Court of
Anderson County,Kansas. If you fail to plead,
judgment and decree will be entered in due
course upon the Petition.
NOTICE
Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. 1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt
may be given without the prior consent of the
consumer given directly to the debt collector or
the express permission of a court of competent
jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to
collect a debt and any information obtained will
be used for that purpose.
Prepared By:
South & Associates, P.C.
Blair Gisi (KS # 24096)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS 67202
(316)684-7733
(316)684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(168836)
sp30t1
Notice to sell property Notice of Colony budget
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 30, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide
Home Loans Servicing LP
Plaintiff,
vs.
Carol J. Scheuerman and Michael A.
Scheuerman, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 11CV48
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, on October 21, 2014, at 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
Lot Twenty-Three (23) in Centennial
Addition to the City of Garnett, Anderson
County, Kansas, commonly known as 212 Kaw
Avenue, Garnett, KS 66032 (the Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the aboveentitled case. The sale is to be made without
appraisement and subject to the redemption
period as provided by law, and further subject
to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com
Vernon Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
of Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
Prepared By:
South & Associates, P.C.
Blair Gisi (KS # 24096)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS 67202
(316)684-7733
(316)684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(129655)
sp30t3
PROFESSIONAL
TAX PREPARATION
tax time
2×2
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
ach
4×10
(Published in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, October 7, 2014)
oc7t1
city of garnett
2×3
October 11 Garnetts Second Saturday
Pumpkin Patch for kids Fall Fun Music Art Tour
Howl-O-Ween Mutt Strut $50 in Gold Dollars
Visit www.experiencegarnettks.com for
updates on Second Saturdays activities,
specials and entertainment.
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
EDITORIAL
A vote for Roberts, Brownback
is a vote against Barack Obama
An arduous and wearisome six years has
seen Hope & Change fall flat, disorganized
and directionless in America. National polls
are clear. The swing voters who put Barack
Hussein Obama in the office of the Presidency
of the United States now say, if they had it to
do all over, they wouldnt.
For Kansas voters in the upcoming
November election one thing is certain: This
election isnt about whether you dislike Pat
Roberts for barely living in Kansas or whether
you shun Sam Brownback for cutting state
income taxes its about whether or not you
stand against the government is the answer
philosophy of Barack Hussein Obama.
The fact that Brownback and Roberts
exemplify the anti-Obama effort gets lost in
the fray. Beset by a state media that despises
Republicans and especially conservatives,
both conservative and moderate leaders in
the states GOP have done a poor job of minimizing their divisions and instead selling
the credo that unites them: 1) Smaller, less
intrusive government; 2) Pro-business/ job
creation; 3) Individual rights. The Republican
trifecta should be clear and well pronounced
to the electorate, and the fact that Roberts and
Brownback have both worked in their own
way to oppose the assault of big government
should be paramount.
But if the majority of Americans and
Kansans wouldnt vote for Obama again,
why do so many seem to be leaning toward
the opponents of two candidates who stand
against him? Its almost like they disconnect
Democrat governor candidate Paul Davis and
Independent Senate candidate Greg Orman
from Obamas record of failure as chief executive. Indeed, Orman and Davis are tied to
Obamas philosophy not just by party affiliation, but by their past actions.
Ormans past financial support of Obama
as well as liberal Senate leaders Harry Reid
and Hilliary Clinton shatter his Independent
faade. Asked whether he would oppose
Obamacare, Orman replies that its an interesting question. Orman is not an Independent;
he is a liberal who supports amnesty for illegal aliens and a host of causes embraced by
the liberal left. Roberts has fought to enforce
immigration laws for three decades a cause
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
putting him in diametric opposition to the
Obama mantra, which wants to give rights
especially voting rights to illegal newcomers who would cast Democrat votes.
Sam Brownback is one of few state governors whove shown the courage to implement
real Republican principles into state government to make it leaner and more effective, and
hes had to do it against the tide of an opposing
liberal media and the depths of a lingering
recession. The result has been 55,000 new jobs
created in Kansas in the past year alone and
education spending increases every year since
2010. Davis, on the other hand, voted against a
Republican school finance bill that put 129 million new dollars into Kansas schools because
he was bent on protecting labor union-style
tenure laws that prevented school districts
from firing bad teachers. Beyond that and his
past voting record in the Legislature its hard
to tell what direction Davis wants to take the
state, because his only campaign theme has
been Im not Sam Brownback. The lack of
direction rings familiar, from a now president
who was elected for being not George Bush.
The fact is the philosophies of the modern political spectrum could not be anymore
well defined in the United States today. With
Obamas campaign promises worn thin and
the countrys standing in the world diminished by his apologetic approach to U.S. foreign policy, Americans have had six grueling
years to decide where they stand.
Kansas voters who oppose Barack Hussein
Obamas vision for America should cast their
votes for Brownback and Roberts.
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.
Hey gun people, have you ever
heard of a gun show? Thats where
you can take your guns and display
them.
To the Garnett city leaders: You
should repay all the people that had
new sidewalks put in. A lot of people spent money they didnt have to
do it because they felt they had to or
else. Its not fair that others will just
ignore doing it, and then theres all
these streets in town that dont even
have sidewalks. Why should some
taxpayers have to do it and others
not? The city should pay for all the
sidewalks. All you are doing is driving people out of Garnett.
I read in the Town Talk today that
the citys planning a Forest of Fear
and Haunted Trail event for the
The Insipid War On Women 2.0
The war on women is back, and more
tendentious than ever.
Democrats are replaying one of their
greatest hits of 2012 in their furious battle to
minimize their midterm losses in a political
environment defined by an unpopular president and general unease.
And why not? The war on women has
a proven record of success — in mobilizing Democratic women and trumping what
would otherwise seem much more important
issues — and it is so simple that any idiot can
run on it.
The recipe is one part taking offense where
clearly none was intended, and one part
discerning new nefarious schemes to deny
women access to birth control. If War on
Women 1.0 was strained and unconvincing,
the new version lacks all self-respect. To
paraphrase Karl Marx, it is history repeating
itself, first as farce, then as self-parody.
During their first debate in North Carolina,
Republican candidate Thom Tillis referred to
Sen. Kay Hagan by her first name, offending
her supporters with his undue familiarity. He
compounded the sin by saying Hagans math
just doesnt add up, a hoary cliche in politics
for decades.
Hagan pronounced herself (what else?)
insulted, while a spokeswoman for the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee,
Regan Page, fired off double-barreled plaints.
She accused Tillis of ugly condescension,
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
outrageous mansplaining and condescending patronization, which is always to
be distinguished from patronizing condescension.
This is all so silly that it is especially offkey in current circumstances. The implied
Democrat message is that, yes, the president
is broadly unpopular, the economy is middling and the world is falling apart — but
someone called me maam!
To the extent that the war on women has
any substance, it centers on minor but flawed
pieces of federal legislation like the Violence
Against Women Act and the Equal Pay Act.
And contraception. Always contraception.
The Democrats deserve credit for managing
to portray a position supported by no one
serious in public life — that women should be
denied birth control — as the default position
of the Republican Party.
The Colorado Senate race has been so
focused on abortion and contraception, it
could be mistaken for a leadership election
of the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists. Playing defense, Republican
Cory Gardner is one of a handful of GOP candidates who have come out in favor of overthe-counter birth control. Yet this innocuous
proposal to provide more ready access to
birth control is itself taken as a dastardly plot
against women.
The wonder of the war of women is that it
works, or at least it has. Republicans have a
better chance of deflecting it this year. They
have more deft candidates, and while the
over-the-counter contraception proposal is
small beer, it is a compelling way to demonstrate comfort with the very access to contraception that Democrats allege Republicans
want to take away.
More importantly, the Republican Party
should realize that its fate with all voters
depends on having a concrete agenda to
address the nations challenges here and
abroad. That is the ultimate insulation from
the insipid politics of the ever-more-tenuous
war on women.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
Lets all celebrate the power of journalism
I believe in newspapers.
Well, thats no surprise, you might say;
youre the executive director of the newspaper association for Kansas.
Thats true, but I sincerely believe those
words.
Why?
Its simple: in a newspaper career that now
spans more than four decades, I have witnessed hundreds of times how the power of
the printed word and the timely photograph
can spark change in our culture.
Ive seen communities rise to the occasion
because local editors believed when citizens
are presented all facets of complex issues,
they will challenge their leaders to make the
right decisions.
Time after time, Ive seen controversial
issues dealt with and resolved when reporters did their best to lay out all the facts for
readers and when editors followed up by
providing reasoned commentary urging the
community to act.
It may be that this special week of Oct.
5 through 11 what we in the industry
affectionately call National Newspaper Week
might more accurately be called National
Journalism Week. Because its really journalism that we celebrate.
Journalism, Merriam Websters Dictionary
says, is the practice of gathering, processing
and disseminating news and information to
STATE COMMENTARY
DOUG ANSTAETT, Kansas Press Assoc.
an audience.
For the first two centuries in America,
we presented journalism to a mass audience
through newspapers, then added radio and
television to the mix.
Today, journalism is disseminated in all
those ways and also through the World Wide
Web to our computers, tablets and smart
phones.
You may not even realize it, but youre
reading a newspaper even when youre on
the newspapers website or reading a story
that has been scraped from a newspaper
website and added to sometimes tens of thousands of other websites around the world.
In whatever way it is delivered, what
makes it journalism is that it is accurate, fair,
balanced and comprehensive. It has context
and depth.
Part of the reason journalism still thrives
is because our Founding Fathers recognized
the importance of freedom of thought and
penned the First Amendment to our nations
Constitution.
Their words were powerful, and they were
specific: Congress shall make no law, they
said, respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble, and to petition the government for
a redress of grievances.
What visionaries they were; they realized
that citizens had to be protected from a tyrannical government and that the best way to
do that was by guaranteeing the freedom of
expression.
This week, we Americans celebrate the
First Amendment, newspapers, journalism
and the overarching need for an informed
citizenry in a democratic society.
Doug Anstaett is executive director of the
Kansas Press Association, headquartered in
Topeka.
youngsters. The location is going to
be at the old dump ground west of
town on 31 Highway. I remember that
old dump being infested with copperheads and I doubt the situation has
improved much over the years. But
they are still active this time of year.
This article about the people on Fifth
and Sixth Streets against the sidewalks, you know this is completely
ridiculous and its not the fault of the
people, its the fault of the city leadership. I sat in the meeting whenever
the handicapped people just asked
for access to get to the medical services at the hospital and access to the
grocery store. Now its just turned
into a big circus. People are stalling
because they dont want to pay for
it and the city doesnt know how to
handle the situation. Well, how did
they handle the situation when people were against building the jail, the
new school and the hospital? They
did it anyway and charged it to their
taxes.
Was talking to some fellows who fish
up at the north lake. They said theyve
never seen no giant catfish. Of course
you are not going to see him during
the daylight hours. Theres too much
noise from the kids at the soccer
field and the shooters over at the gun
range.
The south lake would look even nicer
after being mowed if the growth of
brush growing around most of the
shade trees was cut. Its easy to sit
on a mower and mow, but the brush
takes some physical labor. Could this
be a fall project to get done?
Hey people who live down the street.
If you would feed your dog it wouldnt
get out of your fenced yard and tear up
everyones trash. You really shouldnt
have pets if you cant feed them.
Contact your
legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
e-mail pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building,
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2715 Fax (202) 225-5124
www.moran.senate.gov
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
5A
LOCAL
Historical society learns about familys history in Anderson County
The Anderson County
Historical Society met on
September 4, 2014 at Duffys
Bar & Grill in Greeley, Kansas
at 6:30 p.m.
President Kristie Kinney
called the meeting to order.
The Treasurers report was
provided by Terry Solander
and Shirley Roeckers provided the Vice-President report.
Kristie Kinney provided the
Presidents report. She reported that the recorded video tours
of the museum have almost
been completed with Dorothy
Lickteig, Ona Mae Hunt and
Juanita Kellerman. Once the
tours are completed, we will
video tape tours of the Harris
House. Dorothy Lickteig has
completed Volume 2 of the
Colony history book.
Kristie reported that she has
been working on scheduling a
Civil War special program to
commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. There
are one or two regiments of reenactors who plan to be here in
the spring, and she is working
on finalizing those details. Next
spring will be the end of the
150th anniversary of the 4-year
conflict. Kristie reported the
October 2nd meeting will be at
Mineral Point. The wagon tour
will begin at 6:00 p.m., rather
than 6:30 p.m. in order to complete that tour before dark.
Clara Ann Kempnich provided an interesting program
on her familys history in
Anderson County. Her ancestors surnames were Smiths
and Stewarts, who were English
speaking and Presbyterian
Protestants. They held onto the
memories of the bloody massacre their ancestors had suffered
at the hands of the English
conquerors when they moved
into Scotland. When the northern region of Ireland wanted
to drive out the Catholics,
they offered land grants to
English speaking Scots. Once
in Ireland, the Scots became
known as the dissenters. They
would not vow allegiance to the
Church of England and they
detested tithing to the church.
Dissenters could not be baptized, married or buried by
their own ministers. It had to
be a minister that was ordained
by the church of the state, so
once again they were being
persecuted. Many of the ScotsIrish then came to America to
escape economic and religious
hardships. Between 1717 and
1775, a quarter million people
migrated from Ireland. Her
6th great-grandfather, Samuel
Glasglow Stewart, migrated to
Pennsylvania in 1720 and established a Presbyterian meeting house. At the time of the
American Revolution at least
one of every fifteen Americans
was Scots-Irish and they supported Americas fight for freedom. After years of oppression,
they were unwilling to have a
dictatorship in their new country.
Her Scots-Irish ancestors
were ministers, missionaries, educators, surveyors and
many started businesses. They
supported the Underground
Railroad and helped organize Presbyterian churches
and schools in Kansas. Her
great-grandfather, Reverend
James Nelson Smith, came to
the Kansas-Nebraska border
to establish a colony. He was
the leader of the church and
established schools. In 1857, he
returned from Pennsylvania to
Kansas to start a Presbyterian
colony in Berea, about midway between Richmond and
Greeley, Kansas. In 1874, he
started the Garnett College and
classes were held in the United
Presbyterian Church. The college began with two teachers
and thirty students. There was
a pledge of $25,000 by the synagogue for the support of the
college in 1872, but there is no
record of action and the college
did not materialize. In 1857-1858
the crops were good, but 1859
– 1860 were dry years. Reverend
J.N. Smith set up a saw mill
and grist mill. He regularly
preached in a log cabin. During
the drought he aided his con-
gregation by soliciting donated clothing and supplies from
communities in the east and
offered the supplies in trade for
labor to build the church.
The town of Berea was laid
out in 1858. During the next
few years, the company store,
church, schoolhouse, and post
office were established. The
town only had a few scattered
houses and was not growing. In
1870 when the railroad bypassed
Berea and the post office moved
to Richmond, the town could
no longer survive. Rev. Smith
was the minister in Berea from
April, 1857 to October, 1869.
From 1860 to 1866, he served
both congregations at Berea
and Garnett. In 1866, the family
moved to Garnett. When they
moved to Garnett, the LL&G
Railroad was being built. He
was the Anderson County
Surveyor from 1866 to 1870.
While in Berea, during the
Underground Railroad, slaves
stayed in a cabin for 30 days and
food from
Rev. Smiths cellar was shared with the slaves.
A baby boy was born to one
of the slaves during that stay.
Todd Mildfelt, historian and
resident of Richmond, Kansas,
wrote a book titled Almost
Freedom. When he was young
he heard stories about the
settlement of Berea and the
Underground Railroad in the
Richmond area. In his book
he wrote that Reverend Smith
quietly encouraged the community to understand the plight
of the slaves. At the time, no
one could publicly talk about
who was involved because aiding the slaves was against the
fugitive slave law. Mr. Mildfielt
also composes music and has
written lyrics about Reverend
Smith.
In the middle of the prairie
not far from Berea, a mound
of dirt nearly 150-feet high was
known as Wadsworth Mound,
or Steamboat Mound. It stood
alone and could be seen for
miles. Across the prairie were
a few hills and one was known
as Paradise Hill. Those working
for the Underground Railroad
used a semi-hidden cabin on
the hill in December of 1858,
to hide eleven slaves. The slave
patrol was usually watching for
runaway slaves on the banks
of the river, not in open areas.
A few men were stationed on
Wadsworth Mound to watch
for slave hunters, since they
could see in all directions, and
they would signal if they saw
any. Local people now call the
mound, Peines Mound, which
is the name of the people who
own the surrounding land.
Her grandfather on the
Stewart side of the family,
Harold Stewart, was born in
1890. Her Grandpa Harold use
to make yeast cakes and he
and her Grandma Elsie would
sell them around the county,
and also in Lacygne, Paola and
plaschka & kramer
2×4
midwest hearing
2×4
yutzy
2×3
CONTRACTORS
Guide
Get the job done right!
contractors
6×11.5
GUTTERING
BUILDING MATERIALS
Check this handy directory
of contracting companies
before you take on that
home or business project.
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING
MASON CONTRACTORS
NOW
FEATURING
CARRIER
SYSTEMS!
Lawrence (785) 749-0600 Ottawa (785) 242-3714
Baldwin City (785) 594-3357
(620) 363-4327
GLASS
Osawatomie. The historical
society has Mr. Stewarts yeast
machine, and her Aunt Marys
recipe for the yeast cakes, on
display.
Construction Supply
Contractors Residential & Farm
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
SEPTIC TANKS / SYSTEMS
410 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-7106
LIME & LIMESTONE
FLOORING
SIDING & WINDOWS
CONCRETE CONTRACTORS
Garrison Concrete Inc
Work Done Right
GAS – PROPANE
Replacement Repair Brand New
Dave Garrison Sr.
Dave Garrison Jr.
Estimator/Supervisor
Owner
785-393-0806
785-393-2833
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
www.garrisonconcreteinc.com
Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express
Visit The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com.
If you would like to advertise your business in this directory
call Stacey at 785-448-3121, or email review@garnett-ks.com.
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
LOCAL
Seekers Not Slackers 4-H Club has parents night
Calendar
Oct. 7-Afghanistan War began,
2001; 8-Rural Water District No.
5 board meeting, board office,
8 p.m.; 10-Recycle trailer on
Cherry St., front of City Hall
area Friday morning, leaves
Tuesday; 15-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement, 7
p.m.
School Calendar
Oct. 7-FFA horse and dairy
at Ottawa; high school volleyball at Uniontown, 5 p.m.;
9-middle school volleyball at
Crest, 5 p.m., football 6 p.m., vs.
Jayhawk Lynn; 10-high school
football at Hartford, 6 p.m.; high
school volleyball at Uniontown,
4 p.m.; 13-No school, Teacher
Work Day; 14-high school volleyball at Marmaton Valley, 5
p.m.; Jr. Varsity at Crest vs.
Hartford, 6 p.m.
Meal Site
10-ham and beans, zucchini and
tomatoes, wheat roll, ambrosia salad; 13-chicken taco with
cheese, lettuce, bean salad, tortilla shell, pineapple mango;
15-Birthday meal-chicken fried
breast, mashed potatoes, gravy,
green beans, roll, cake, ice
cream. Phone 620-852-3950 for
reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented Sept.
28 was Matthew 18:1-4; 7:7-8;
James 4:2-4; 1:19-21; and 1:5-8.
Pastor Mark McCoy presented the sermon Are You KID
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
Enough… to Ask? Mens Bible
study Tuesday mornings, 7
a.m.; Cross Training Classes,
9:24 a.m.-Larry Wittmer teaches on Romans to adults; Pastor
Mark teaches some of the men
on leadership, have classes for
children; Small group at Randy
Riebels, Tuesday, 7 p.m.-subject 40 Days Toward a More
Godly Nation; Womens small
group Having a Mary Heart
in a Martha World by Joanna
Weaver at Carrie Riebels
house Tuesday mornings, 9:30
a.m. or Tues. evenings, 7 p.m.;
Oct. 5-Pastor Appreciation
Sunday; Working Wonders
CWC, Oct. 8, 7 p.m., all women
welcome; church potluck dinner and meeting Oct. 12 (second
Sunday) following services.
UMC
Scripture presented Sept. 28
at the United Methodist Church
was Psalm 99 1-5, Exodus 17:1-7,
13 Point
Pitch played
Philippians 2:1-13, and Matthew
21: 23-32. Pastor Dorothy Welch
presented the sermon.
Northcott Church
All Sundays- Bible Study,
9:28 a.m., Worship 10:28
a.m.; Bible Study at 6:28 p.m.
Thursday evenings. Pastor
Mike Farran, phone 620-3634828; Announcements-Oct. 4Biblesta Gospel music begins
at 10 a.m. and parade, 1:30 p.m.;
5-Heart-to Heart will be ministering in song at 10 a.m.; 6
p.m.-at Hope Chapel in Moran
the Josties Family and the
Johnsons will be ministering in
song.
Registration Books
If you have not registered
to be able to vote in the Nov. 4
election, you may do so until
closing of the books on Oct. 14.
Registration is available during
the business hours of the City
Office in Colony (8-12 a.m. and 1
to 5 p.m.) daily except Saturday
or Sunday or at the Anderson
County Clerks office in Garnett.
Registration forms may also be
mailed to anyone requesting
one from the Anderson County
Clerks office. Anyone who has
moved or changed their name
is required to vote. First time
registrants in the county must
provide proof of citizenship, i.e.
birth certificate, naturalization
papers
Crest Enrollment
This years enrollment: PreKindergarten, 14; Kindergarten,
14; First grade, 17; Second, 13;
Third, 18; Fourth, 14; Fifth, 14;
Sixth, 11; Seventh, 18; Eighth,
12; and High School, 67 for a
total of 198.5 FTE, down 9 from
last year.
Extension
Nancy Schuster, former
Anderson County Family &
Consumer Science Agent has
a new title: Frontier District
Food and Nutrition Agent.
This change occurred July 1.
She will be doing Extension
District programs and her
job now includes two other
countiesOsage and Franklin.
Congratulations, Nancy!
4-H
The monthly meeting of
the Seekers Not Slackers 4-H
club was held Sept. 15 at the
Lone Elm community building. It was parents night. The
meeting was called to order by
C.J. Lacey. Gerald Jones, Jeff
Gillespie, and Monica Walter
led the club in saying the flag
Newton, and Gunner Ellington.
The meeting was adjourned by
saying the 4-H motto. -Makayla
Jones, reporter
Around Town
The Jolly Dozen Club met
Sept. 15 for their first monthly
season meeting. Debbie Wools
hosted the group at the City
Hall community room. Eight
members answered roll call
with something they like about
fall. It was decided they would
hold a Halloween party at their
next regular meeting of Oct.
20. Each member is to invite
someone to the party. Claudette
Anderson received the hostess
gift.
Jerry Luedke, Colony and
Justin and Ronnie Luedke,
Garnett attended the funeral
service of their cousin, Kevin
Finley at Atwood Sept. 25.
Did you know? Columbus
Day was first celebrated in
the U.S. in 1792 on the 300th
anniversary of the explorers
(Christopher Columbus) arrival in the New World, but didnt
become a federal holiday until
1934!
CLIP & SAVE
anco engineer
3×5
Thank you
to everyone
rickerson
pipelining
2x4who came out to our
13 Point Pitch is played at the
Senior Center on Thursdays at 6
p.m.
Come play pitch, bring a snack
and have a lot of fun. If you have
any questions, call Joan at the
Center.
High winner was Alice
Valentine.
Low winner was Martha
Beachy.
Perfect game was won by
Alice Valentine.
salute and 4-H pledge. Roll call
was answered by stating your
favorite pie. It was answered
by 15 members and 3 leaders.
Monica Walter and Larissa
Hermreck led the club in singing Kum Ba Yah. Lanie Walter
accompanied on the piano.
Community leader Stacy
Sprague
announced
the
achievement banquet will be
held on Nov. 16, at 12:30 p.m.
She also informed the club that
a new 4-H agent has been hired.
Her name is Janae McNally. For
the program, Brenda Stephens
taught the club how to make
Easy Snack Cake. Leann
Church and Holly Ellington led
the club in playing balloon football. Cara Bowen announced
the new slate of officers elected for 2014-2015. President
Makayla Jones; Vice President
Kendra Sprague; Treasurer
Cassie Bowen; SecretaryLanie
Walter and Rebecca Sprague;
HistorianKarson Hermreck;
ParliamentarianBrock Peters
and Dal Lacey; Flag Salute/
Song Leader /Recreation
LeaderBrooklynn Jones, Hank
NOW ACCEPTING
#3 – #7 PLASTICS
Ribbon Cutting
on Saturday.
See Recycle Trailer
Schedule in this weeks
Anderson County Review
Page 3B
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc..
(785) 448-3121
CENTRAL HEIGHTS
VS.
OSAWATOMIE
Friday, Oct. 10
Coronation 6:45pm
Game Time 7:00pm
HOMECOMING ATTENDANTS:
HOMECOMING CANDIDATES:
(L to R): Fr: Trinity Bogle, Randall Crump
Sp: Alyssa Jones, Cameron Hampton
Jr: Heather Valdiviez, Merrick Brown
(L to R): Emily Miller, Chance Schooler,
Sydney Meyer, Gavin Holler,
Kalliope Craft, Jacob Anderson,
Lexi Griffin, Eli Davis
These area businesses proudly support our youth…
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Country Mart
Garnett
(785) 448-2121
OMalley Equipment
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Dairy Queen
Garnett
(785) 448-5800
Patriots Bank
Garnett
(785) 448-3191
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
Beckman Motors
Garnett
(785) 448-5441
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC.
Princeton, Richmond, Garnett
(785) 937-2269
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Farm Bureau Financial Svcs
Aaron Lizer – Garnett
(785) 448-6125
Brand N Iron
Princeton
(785) 937-2225
Front Row Sports
Garnett
(785) 448-5818
Carswell Automotive
Ottawa
(785) 242-6360
Greeley Farm Implement
Greeley
(785) 867-2600
C.D. Schulte Agency
Garnett
(785) 448-6191
GSSB
Garnett
(785) 448-3111
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Performance Electric
Ottawa
(785) 242-5748
Southern Star Central
Gas Pipelines – Welda
(785) 448-4800
Emergency: (800) 324-9696
Princeton Quick Stop
Princeton
(785) 937-2061
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow, Agent – Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Richmond Healthcare &
Rehabilitation
Richmond
(785) 835-6135
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Rods Auto Repair & Custom Exhaust
Garnett
(785) 448-6535
Vision Source
Garnett
(785) 448-6879
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
7A
LOCAL
VFW Has POW/MIA Ceremony
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-07-2014 / Photo Submitted
Garnett VFW Post #6397 had a MIA/POW supper and ceremony at the VFW Post, September 19,
2014. From left, Steve Newland, Garnett Past Post Commander, sits at the head table with Ray
Calore, VFW District MIA/POW chairman; Clarence Hermann, Garnett VFW MIA/POW Chairman; John
Musgrave, MIA/POW speaker, and Mrs. John Musgrave of Baldwin City.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-07-2014 / Photo Submitted
Mark Magner, Garnett VFW Commander, reads the names of those who are Missing in Action or
Prisoners of War, as the audience helps light the candles in remembrance of the MIA/POWs.
Poet Laureate of Kansas to present reading, discussion
In Conjunction with the
Walker Art Tour, The Friends
of the Garnett Public Library
will host an event with Wyatt
Townley, Poet Laureate of
Kansas on Saturday, Oct. 11,
2014 at 11:00 in the Garnett
Public Library Archer Room.
Members of the community
are invited to attend the free
program. The program is
made possible by the Kansas
Humanities Council.
The Walker Art Tour will
consist of touring 11 locations
with 17 artists, 1 group, and
the Walker Art Gallery. Maps
and tour info available online
at: www.ExperienceGarnettKS.
com. Artists Larry Peters and
Barbara Waterman Peters will
be here to discuss their artwork
from 2-3 p.m. Their artwork
is currently on display at the
Garnett Public Library.
The notion of home is a
long-held Kansas value. Join
Poet Laureate of Kansas Wyatt
Townley as part of her statewide conversation about coming home to poetry. Poetry is
a place we can return to in
all kinds of weather, with its
innate power to heal and com-
fort, transform and inspire.
Its porch light is always on.
Wyatt will read and discuss her
work as well as that of other
poets, inviting us to come home
to the poetry that underlies our
lives in an age of distraction.
Wyatt Townley is a widely
published, nationally known
poet and a fourth-generation
Kansan. Her work has been
featured on National Public
Radios The Writers Almanac
with Garrison Keillor, in US
Poet Laureate Emeritus Ted
Koosers American Life in
Poetry column, and published
in journals ranging from The
Paris Review to Newsweek.
She has published three collections of poetry: The Breathing
Field (Little Brown), Perfectly
Normal (The Smith), and The
Afterlives of Trees (Woodley
Press), a Kansas Notable Book
and winner of the Nelson
Poetry Book Award.
A founding board member
of The Writers Place in Kansas
City, MO, Townley has served
as a teaching artist with Young
Audiences and Writers in the
Schools program, and has
appeared at writers confer-
ences and literary festivals in
the Midwest and Northeast.
The Poet Laureate of Kansas
is a program made possible by
the Kansas Humanities Council,
a 501c3 nonprofit organization
that promotes the humanities as a public resource for
all Kansans. Townley explores
the humanities through public
readings, presentations, and
discussions about poetry in
communities across the state.
The Kansas Humanities
Council conducts and supports
community-based programs,
serves as a financial resource
through an active grant-making program, and encourages
Kansans to engage in the civic
and cultural life of their communities. For more information
about KHC programs contact
the Kansas Humanities Council
at 785/357-0359 or visit online at
www.kansashumanities.org.
pome on the range
2×5
October 11 and 12
(10-6)
maloans
2×3
$11.99*
(12-5)
includes choice of side, salad and roll
Try our NEW Hot Wings!
NO ADMISSION CHARGE!
PRIME RIB Friday & Saturday Night
*Price good for dine-in only, offer not valid on catering.
Prime rib offer good only with purchase of drink.
Price subject to change without notice.
DINNER: Upstairs Wed. – Thur. 5 p.m. – 8 p.m., Fri. – Sat. 5 p.m. – 9 p.m.
785-448-2616
Find us on facebook for more weekend specials!
On the Square – At the corner of 4th and Oak
Downtown Garnett
chhs homecoming
6×10.5
Pome on the Range Orchards & Winery
Homewood Exit #176 off I-35 SW of Ottawa
PomeOnTheRange.com
785-746-5492
ANDERSON COUNTY
VS.
PRAIRIE VIEW
Friday, Oct. 10
Coronation 6:30pm
Game Time 7:00pm
HOMECOMING ATTENDANTS:
HOMECOMING CANDIDATES:
King Candidates Front Row (L to R):
Kyle Tate, Tyler Wolken, Jacob Ruby
Queen Candidates Back Row (L to R):
Alisha Gettler, Bailey Wolken, Payton Feuerborn
(L to R): Fr. Taten LeBlanc & Moriah Davison
Sp. Luiz Felipe Azevedo & Samantha Nickell
Jr. Bryce Feuerborn & Paige Scheckel
These area businesses proudly support our youth…
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Burns Dental Lab
Garnett
(785) 448-5543
Front Row Sports
Garnett
(785) 448-5818
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
C.D. Schulte Agency
Garnett
(785) 448-6191
GSSB
Garnett
(785) 448-3111
Bank of Greeley
Greeley
(785) 867-2010
Country Mart
Garnett
(785) 448-2121
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Beckman Motors
Garnett
(785) 448-5441
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Brand N Iron
Princeton
(785) 937-2225
Dairy Queen
Garnett
(785) 448-5800
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
Garnett, Princeton, Richmond
(785) 937-2269
Farm Bureau Financial Svcs
Aaron Lizer – Garnett
(785) 448-6125
Patriots Bank
Garnett
(785) 448-3191
Southern Star Central
Gas Pipelines – Welda
(785) 448-4800
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Performance Electric
Ottawa
(785) 242-5748
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Greeley Farm Implement
Greeley
(785) 867-2600
Princeton Quick Stop
Princeton
(785) 937-2061
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Miller Hardware
Garnett
(785) 448-3241
Rods Auto Repair
& Custom Exhaust
Garnett
(785) 448-6535
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
OMalley Equipment
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
Emergency: (800) 324-9696
Vision Source
Garnett
(785) 448-6879
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
8A
SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Iola stops Central Heights 34-0 Lancers win homecoming
IOLA The Iola Mustangs whittled away at Central Heights
Friday night, scoring in every
quarter and sticking to the
Viking offense like glue to inch
up to their 34-0 win.
The Iola defense not only
thwarted the Vikes scoring
attempts, they also secured
extra time on offense for Iola.
The Mustangs massed 407 yards
on offense to Central Heights
117. Iola ran 60 offensive plays to
CHHSs 43 and held possession
nearly a third longer than CHHS.
Zele Smith managed 51 yards
on 16 carries for Central Heights
and caught three passes for 34
yards.. Chance Schooler had
23 yards on the ground. Jason
Clissold caught two passes for 23
yards.
Schooler led the Vikes with
9 tackles and 7 solo stops. Cody
Hermreck had 8.5 and Smith had
7.
AC tops CHHS, falls to Iola
IOLA Blocking and passing were problematic for the
AC Bulldogs last week when
Garnett clipped a 25-21, 25-17
win from Central Heights, but
fell 25-16, 25-18 to host Iola.
MaKayla Kueser led ACs
offense with 12 kills followed
by Kinley Jones with 11. Jones
also set for 96 percent on the
day. Jasmine White was 12/13
for defensive digs. Lexi Pedrow
led from the serving line with
4 aces, Kueser and Jessica
McCullar both had 3.
AC struggles at Wellsville
WELLSVILLE The AC girls
struggled through a five-game
grid in the Wellsville Invitational
Volleyball
Tournament
Saturday, managing wins over
West Franklin and Osage City
but falling to Baldwin and to
Wellsville in both pool play and
consolation play.
We played better throughout the day, said head coach
Glenn Suderman. Injuries to
Madison Martin and illness of
Reagan Jirak made the day a
challenge.
MaKayla Kueser led all servers with 6 aces on the day and 22
kills. Cassidy Lutz had a .357 kill
percentage and 14 blocks.
Jasmine White, Kueser and
Jirak helped the Bulldogs with
solid defense.
The Bulldogs follow up with
home meets on Oct. 18 and 21.
EVENTS…
FROM PAGE 1A
kin slinging, pumpkin bowling, a pumpkin carving contest
(bring your pumpkins ready for
judging), a fall photo booth and
more. These free activities are
provided courtesy of the Life
Assembly of God.
Later that day, bring your
dog for a pet parade around
the town square. Dress your
dog and yourself for the HowlO-Ween Mutt Strut. Check in
at the gazebo on the Anderson
County Courthouse lawn at
3 p.m. The parade will begin
at 3:30 p.m., and prizes will be
awarded.
The Golden Ticket drawing
will be at 5 p.m. at the gazebo
downtown.
The music entertainment
schedule is:
2:30 p.m. Angie Huff
and Tori Ponce at ReFinedReCherished, 6th and Oak.
6 p.m. – Bryce Fritz, Racers
Lounge, Hwy 169.
6:30 p.m. – Ethan Marshall,
Trade Winds, 110 W. 5th Ave.
6:30 p.m. – Tori Ponce, Scipio
Supper Club, 32465 NE Neosho
Rd.
8 p.m. – Bryce Fritz, Scipio
Supper Club, 32465 NE Neosho
Rd.
The Lake Garnett Grand
Prix Revival
Lake Garnett was known
for its sports car races in the
1960s and 70s, and an event on
Saturday will honor that heritage. The Lake Garnett Grand
Prix Revival has more than 160
pre-entries in this event.
This is the first actual structured event of this type to
be held in Garnett since the
national SCCA sanctioned
races held in 1972 on Garnetts
2.8-mile true-road course
and includes a track event, car
show, and an auto cross at the
Garnett Industrial Airport.
No admission will be charged
to spectators, and parking is free
in designated areas. Everyone
entering the event will be asked
to sign an insurance waiver.
Spectators should bring a lawn
chair.
Features of the event include
a car show from 10:15 a.m. to
12:30 p.m.; a race car demonstration from 1 to 1:30 p.m.; track
events from 10:45 a.m. to 12:35
p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.; parade
laps at the track from 4:15 p.m.
to 4:35 p.m. and a parade downtown from 4:35 p.m. to 5 p.m.
For spectator information
and latest event updates, please
visit www.lggpr.org.
The Garnett Art Tour
The annual Garnet Art Tour
returns Saturday at 11 locations
around the city featuring 17 artists, one group and the Walker
Art Collection from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. There is no charge.
Refreshments will be served
at the Walker Art Gallery in the
Garnett Public Library, 125 W.
Fourth Ave. Special events also
will take place in the library.
Artists also will be available
at Mr. Ds Restaurant, 311 N.
Maple (Hwy. 59); Cedar Creek
Outfitters, Fourth and Maple
(Hwy. 59); Front Row Sports,
Fourth and Maple (Hwy. 59);
Thelma Moore Community
Playhouse, Fifth and Walnut;
Salon Connection, 146 E. Fifth
Ave; Art In Iron, 115 W. Fifth
Ave.; Town Hall Center, 125 W.
Fifth Ave.; Patriots Bank, 131
E. Fourth Ave.; History House
Antiques, 121 E. Fourth Ave.;
Royal Rubbish No. 2, 501 S. Oak
Street; and the Kirk House, 145
W. Fourth Ave.
For more information and
a complete list of the artists
at each site, visit www.experiencegarnettks.com.
We will not be open
for business
Monday,
October 13th
in honor of
Columbus Day.
We will re-open for
normal business
hours the following
Tuesday.
farmers state bank
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gssb
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In observance of
Columbus Day,
we will not be open
for business
Monday, October 13th.
We will re-open
Tuesday for regular
business hours.
Internet banking and e-statements.
COLONY Crest head football
coach Chuck Mahon knows its
unseemly to win by 52 points
and still have complaints. But
beating Elk Valley Friday night
60-8 didnt belay fears of better
teams coming down the road at
the Lancers this season.
Im very concerned about
our defensive play, Mahon
said. I dont know if its technique they dont want to grab
cloth. If we do that next week
well be on the other end of
that. Hartfords a very good
team. Theyve got five or six
really good players.
On the other hand, we did
some really good things on the
offense, he said. We moved
the ball really well.
The Lions mounted several
solid drives against the Lancers
but were plagued by foibles on
their offensive snap, which
resulted in at least two salvos
that launched over the quarterbacks head and yielded Lancer
fumble recoveries or significant
losses of yardage. On offense,
the Lancers were clearly in
control and scored on each possession. The Lancers kicked off
so many times the first period,
the 12-minute quarter lasted 51
minutes.
The game was beyond the 46point rule and was called after
the first half.
Austin Green led the Lancer
offense with three TDs and 184
of Crests 320 total offensive
yards. Rene Rodriguez, Hunter
Frazell and Evan Godderz and
Brandon Brallier also scored
for Crest. Gage Adams and
Codi Vermillion led the defense
with 5 tackles apiece. Adams,
Christian Troxel and Braden
McGhee each racked up a QB
sack apiece.
AC girls rule at Central Heights
RICHMOND The Anderson
County girls placed three runners in the top 4 slots last
week to take first place in the
Central Heights Cross Country
Invitational.
Averi Wilson was first on the
4k course with a 16:43.29, Bailee
Wilson third with 17:40.70 and
Gwen Sibley 4th with 17:52.55.
With 35 points AC was a solid
distance from second place
West Franklin at 49. Iola had 74,
Spring Hill 86 and Osawatomie
96.
ACs Eliza Sibley finished
18th with 19:17.19. Remi Hedges
was 19th with 19:20.20, Paige
Scheckel 23rd at 19:50.88 and
Morgan Egidy 25th at 20:15.57.
The AC varsity boys were 6th
in their 7-team competition. Top
finisher was Dyla Brenneman
of Spring Hill with 17:01.30 on
the 5k run. ACs Tyler Jumet
was 13th with 19:37.33, Trevor
McDaniel 14th 19:37.89, Josh
McAuley 29th 20:19.45, Owen
Lutz 34th 20:40.89, Vincent
Trujillo 41st 21:20.84, Justin
Jumet 51st 22:17.02, Nate Gainer
59th 24:54.66.
Central Heights Dillon
Welch ran a 20:40.14 for 32nd
for the Vikings. Matt Ashwill
was 33rd at 20:40.46 and Kyle
Cardin 39th at 21:04.11.
Hicks 1st on bars at Newton
NEWTON Callie Hicks
scored a 9.2 for a first place
finish on the uneven parallel
bars in Fridays 6-team, 6A
gymnastics meet at Newton,
helping the Lawrence Free
State Firebirds to a first place
overall finish on the day.
Free State totaled 107.525
points across four events,
edging hosts Newton by 4.325
points for top honors
Hicks, a junior, also placed
fourth in the balance beam
competition. Senior
teammate
Grace Bartle
averaged a
9.0 rating
across the
vault, bars,
Hicks
beam and
floor events
to lead the Firebirds.
Hicks is the daughter
of Dane and Barb Hicks of
Greeley.
comfort care homes
4×10.5
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-07-2014 / Dane Hicks
Crests Codi Vermillion zeroes in on Elk Valley quarterback Kyler
Folsom. Tackling was a problem for the Lancers in their homecoming game Friday but not enough to dampen a 60-8 royal win.
frs
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COMMUNITY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
CALENDAR
Tuesday, October 7
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4:30 p.m. – ACHS volleyball at
Osawatomie
5 p.m. – Crest volleyball
at Uniontown with Pleasanton
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
Wednesday, October 8
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
Thursday, October 9
1 p.m. – ACHS girls golf at
Basehor/Linwood
4 p.m. – ACHS cross country at
Osage City
4 p.m. – ACJH football at home
with Prairie View
4:30 p.m. – ACHS freshmen
football at home
with Osawatomie
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
Friday, October 10
Recycle Trailer at Westphalia
until Thursday
7 p.m. – ACHS football at home
with Prairie View (homecoming)
7 p.m. – Crest football at Hartford
Saturday, October 11
7-10 a.m. – VFW breakfast
9 a.m. – ACHS freshmen volleyball
at Chanute Invitational
9 a.m. – ACHS JV volleyball at
Osawatomie Tournament
4 p.m. – Crest volleyball at
Uniontown Tournament
Monday, October 13
8:30 a.m. – ACHS girls golf regional
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV football at
Prairie View
6 p.m. – Greeley Site Council/PTO
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Three events in 1 day
GARNETT – Garnett is the place
to be with three activities in one
day.
Second Saturdays kicks into
overdrive on October 11, with bargains galore, great dining, art,
entertainment and more. October
Second Saturday activities in
Garnett feature an Octoberfest
of fun. Bring the kids to ReFinedReCherished from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. for a miniature pumpkin
patch for kids where they can
enjoy decorating small pumpkins. Run down to the Anderson
County Courthouse Lawn at 2
p.m. for a variety of activities the
whole family will enjoy, including
pumpkin slinging, pumpkin bowling, a pumpkin carving contest
(bring your pumpkins ready for
judging), a fall photo booth and
more. These free family friendly
activities are courtesy of the Life
Assembly of God.
Another event will revive
what is hoped to be the return of
Garnetts sports car racing heritage. The Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Revival has over 160 pre-entries
in this multifaceted motorsports
event to be held on Saturday,
October 11. This is the first actual
structured event of this type to be
held in Garnett since the national
SCCA sanctioned races held in
1972 on Garnetts 2.8-mile trueroad course and includes a track
event, car show, and an auto cross
at the Garnett Industrial Airport
Garnett also is where the art is
Saturday, October 11, 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Visit 11 locations featuring
17 artists, 1 group and the Walker
Art Collection. View the art, meet
the artists, and register at each
location to win prizes, including
one $50 cash prize. Refreshments
are served in the Walker Art
Gallery located in the Garnett
Public Library building, 125 W.
4th Avenue. There is no charge
for this tour.
Be sure and cash in on the
sales and featured promotions
at many of the Second Saturday
participating businesses. Dont
forget to ask for your Golden
Tickets for the Second Saturday
Drawing where you could win
gold dollars at a minimum of $50.
At 2:30 p.m., catch musical
entertainment on the patio at
ReFined-ReCherished located at
6th and Oak with Angie Huff and
Tori Ponce.
The favorite October Second
Saturdays event is the Howl-OWeen Mutt Strut. Dress up your
dog and yourself and join in
the pet parade around the town
square. Parade check-in is at the
gazebo on the Anderson County
Courthouse Lawn at 3 p.m. The
parade will begin at 3:30 p.m.
Judges will award prizes.
Following the Mutt Strut,
gather at the gazebo once again
at 5 p.m. for the GoldenTicket
Giveaway ($50). The winning
name/numbers will be announced
at the gazebo.
KU, Chiefs and Royals fans
will want to visit Royal Rubbish
No. 2 and view the spectacular
sports photography art exhibit by
Moffpix (Professional photographer Jeff Moffet).
As the cooler weather sets in
Second Saturdays musical entertainment heads indoors at great
dining venues around Garnett.
Would you like fries with that?
Its an old adage I only
went to the grocery store for
eggs and milk and came home
with a car load. You should
operate your business like the
grocery store and be sure to
sell complementary products
and accessories to your main
product or service.
Think about it: Home Depot
puts the grill scrapers, charcoal
chimneys, etc., next to the new
grills on display; the Verizon
kiosks at the mall conveniently
have those little rubber phone
covers (and at $25 for a little
piece of rubber, the mark-up
has to be awesome!); lawn &
garden departments of big
stores put the fertilizer spreaders right next to the fertilizer.
If youre in competition particularly with a larger megaretailer, try offering a second
product for free or at a discount.
The add-on will enhance the
value of the purchase. Strongly
consider the freebie everybody loves a freebie but if you
cant make it free at least do a
solid discount.
With the add-on in mind, be
sure to communicate the extra
value. If youre selling a new
barbecue grill and offering a
new 9-piece grill kit as a premium, be sure to note that the
$150 grill comes with a grill
kit worth $39.95 and tell your
customer to keep that in mind
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
when comparing your price to
your competitors.
If your customers tend to
comparison shop (and many
do, particularly with online
options), dont hesitate to put
a time limit on a premium or
freemium as an urge to action.
Another idea is to give customers a choice of premiums
or freemiums. If they get one
free with a purchase but really
want both, you have an excellent chance of making the second sale.
Remember: complementary
products can turn one sale into
two or three, and can help build
customer loyalty and word-ofmouth promotion.
BUSINESS BEAT
Family practice
physician joins ACH
Family Care Center
GARNETT On Sept. 8,
Janell Jones, M.D., joined
Anderson County Hospital
and the Family Care Center.
She is now the communitys
fifth family practice physician and is currently accepting new patients.
Dr. Jones has received
numerous awards during her medical training
including the Excellence in
Family Medicine Award and
the Excellence in Research
Award from The University
of Kansas Family Medicine
Residency Program. She is
also the recipient of the Gold
Humanism Honor Society,
Kansas Association of Family
Practice Hostetter Award
for Excellence in Family
Medicine, the Matthew
Freeman Award in Social
Justice, and the MaryAnn
McMullan Memorial Award
for Excellence in Palliative
Care.
Dr. Jones has been active
on the American Association
of Family Physicians as a
CME Development Board
member. She recently completed a fellowship at the
University of Kansas Medical
Center where she focused on
geriatric medicine. Dr. Jones
completed her undergraduate education for pre-medicine at Rockhurst University
in Kansas City, Missouri.
She completed her doctoral
training at the University of
Kansas Medical Center in
Kansas City, Kansas.
Dr. Jones is an outstand-
Farm Bureau Meeting
The Anderson County Farm
Bureau Annual Meeting was held
Wednesday, September 17th at the
Community Building, Garnett.
In the photo at top right is
the presentation of the Anderson
County Farm Family of the Year
award Jake Strobel, Anderson
County Farm Bureau President;
Randy & Betsy Bunnel recipients; Charlie Sargent, Kansas
Farm Bureau 2nd District
Administrator. Randy & Betsy
were also selected as the KFB
2nd District Farm Family of the
Year. Congratulations to Randy
& Betsy!
The second photo is the
presentation of the Century
Farm award Charlie Sargent,
Kansas Farm Bureau 2nd
District Administrator; LaVerne
Howarter, Welda recipient
and Jake Strobel, Anderson
County Farm Bureau President.
Qualifications for Century Farm
is they must be a member of
Farm Bureau, ownership within
the same family for 100 years or
more, own at least 80 acres and
must be related to the original
owner.
ACH
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Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to
him at review@garnett-ks.com
or (785) 448-3121.
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519 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F: 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. T/Th: 9 a.m. – Noon
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LOCAL
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SUBSCRIBE TO THE REVIEW BY CALLING (785)448-3121
ing new physician with
exceptional
experience.
We are excited to have her
join us at Anderson County
Hospital and look forward to
the leadership and talent that
she brings to our great team
at the Family Care Center,
Denny Hachenberg, Anderson
County Hospital CEO, said.
Dr. Jones grew up in
rural Missouri and looks
forward to returning to community similar to her childhoods. Her daughter, Anna,
recently began attending the
University of Kansas.
Dr. Jones is board certified in family medicine and
is accepting new patients at
the Family Care Center in
Garnett, Kansas. To make
an appointment, call 785-4482674.
2B
HISTORY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
2004: First Cornstock artist, Chely Wright, signed
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-07-2014 / Photo Submitted
Cookie jars were more popular during the Great Depression, when
our grandmothers were forced to abandon daily trips to the baker in
favor of home-baked goodies.
Cookie jars took leap in 1929
This old cookie jar has been
in Kays family for many, many
years. What isnt known is
whether it once belonged to her
great grandmother or to her
grandmother.
Cookie jar history can be
traced back to the 18th Century
England, where it is generally
believed that they originated
as Biscuit Jars. Our English
cousins used the term biscuit
for a small tea cake or scone,
which in the U.S. translates
as cookie. Once baked these
biscuits had to be stored in a
place that protected them and
kept them fresh. The biscuit
jar eventually migrated across
the Atlantic, and by the turn
of the century they could be
found on the counters of stores
and bakeries across America,
usually filled with fresh baked
cookies.
Due to the lack of funds,
brought on by the Great
Depression, our grandmothers
were forced to abandon their
daily trip to the bakers, and opt
instead for more home baked
goodies. This increase in home
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
baking of course brought on a
need for more suitable cookie
storage containers, than the
make-do cardboard oatmeal box
or empty coffee tin. It wouldnt
take long for U.S. Industry to
recognize and fill this need.
Cookie jar history took a
giant leap in 1929. Early cookie
jars were usually very simple
cylindrical or bean pot shaped,
with very little or no decoration. In the 1940s cookie jars
shapes, designs and decorations
consisting of people, fruits, vegetables, flowers, animals and
cartoon characters zoomed up
until the mid 1970s.
Cookie jars are very collectible artifacts today.
Oct. 12, 2004
Country music starlet Chely
Wright will be the featured performer at Cornstock Sept. 24
of next year, an evening concert topping off a day of cornrelated events at the Anderson
County Corn Festival.
The Anderson County
Commission was told they will
have to borrow money locally
to finance construction of the
Welda sewer project because a
$268,300 loan from the USDAs
Rural Development Agency
will not be available until the
completion of the project, but
the project engineer said the
net result will be money saved
for the county.
After being rebuffed by the
Anderson County Commission
last summer, the Kansas
Department of Health and
Environment has promised to
pay for a cleanup of a dump site
near Scipio if the county will
write a work plan and submit a
grant application.
Oct. 10, 1994
The average person walking
through Anderson County Jr./
Sr. High School notices a large
amount of open space, a profusion of windows that augment
artificial lighting and in general a sense that the building is
a well planned and built structure. But administrators and
school board members, like the
owners of a newly built house,
also notice some of the little
things that arent quite right.
They notice a wavy wall here,
some mildew that might signify
a moisture problem there or
the odd crack that wasnt there
a few months ago. The board
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
agreed to a construction walkthrough, and a cursory inspection earlier this month found 11
items that may need attention,
including some water leaks,
various cracks in bricks and
floors, uneven floors, some
missing or improperly installed
floor drains and a problem with
escaping sewer gas.
ACJSHS Activities Director
Tom Tucker will start research
later this year on the implementation of softball and baseball
programs in the district. More
than 30 people attended the
school board meeting Thursday
in support of a plan to start the
new programs.
Oct. 8, 1984
Anderson County Sheriff
Tom Hermreck and county
workers cut down cultivated marijuana near Colony
Thursday afternoon. The marijuana is of estimated value of
approximately $18-20,000 on the
streets and is of good quality.
The marijuana was destroyed
by burning.
The weather has been cloudy
and fairly cool the past week.
The highest temperatures during the past week were recorded Wednesday and Thursday
with 83 degrees, while the low-
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2×3
KU to honor local seniors
LAWRENCE Students from
six Kansas high schools will be
honored Wednesday, Oct. 15,
by the University of Kansas
Alumni Association and KU
Endowment.
A total of 44 seniors from
high schools in Anderson and
Franklin counties will be recognized for their academic
achievements and named
Kansas Honor Scholars at a 6:30
p.m. dinner and program at St.
Rose Philippine Duchesne, 514 E.
Fourth, Garnett.
Since 1971, the Kansas Honors
Program has recognized over
125,000 scholars who rank in
the top 10 percent of their high
school senior classes.
Community volunteers collect reservations, coordinate
details and serve as local contacts for the event. Charlie and
Margy Porter, of Ottawa, are the
Franklin County coordinators.
Terry Solander, of Garnett, is
the Anderson County coordinator.
The Kansas Honors Program
is made possible by KU
Endowment and proceeds from
the Jayhawk license plate program.
Anderson County High
School: Tana Benton, Garnett;
Nicholas Billion, Lane; Shelby
Brooks, Garnett; Melissa
Kropf, Wesphalia; Samantha
McCullough, Garnett; Alexis
Pedrow, Richmond; Eliza Sibley,
Garnett; Bailee Wilson, Garnett.
Crest High School: Regan
Morrison, Kincaid.
Central Heights High School:
Marissa Ashwill, Princeton;
Chase Brown, Richmond; James
Kice, Richmond; Sydney Meyer,
Princeton; Tami Schaefer,
Princeton.
diebolt
2×2
3rd Annual Art Tour
city of garnett
10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
2×5 FREE Art Tour
Saturday, Oct. 11th
See the Art Meet the Artists
Tour different locations,
each featuring different art & artists.
Mr. Ds Restaurant Cedar Creek Outfitters
Garnett Flowers & Gifts Front Row Sports
Community Playhouse Art In Iron Town Hall Center
Royal Rubbish Salon Connection Patriots Bank
History House Antiques Walker Art Collection
Register at each location to WIN PRIZES!
Sponsored by the Walker Art Committee.
Enjoy Refreshments at the Garnett Public Library, 126 E. 4th Ave.
Kansas Poet Laurette Wyatt Townley – Archer Room – 11 a.m.
Larry Peters and Barbara Waterman-Peters art exhibition west wing galleries of the library 2:00 – 3:00 p.m.
Michelle Gressel, artist Kirk House, 145 W. 4th Ave.
www.ExperienceGarnettKS.com
yoder auction
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est temperature was Sept. 30
with 28 degrees.
Oct. 8, 1914
A burglar entered Jones
grocery last night, but so far,
Mr. Jones has missed no goods.
J.H. Rodgers thinks a box or
two of cigars were taken, but of
that he is not sure. The burglar
tried to cut a glass out of a back
window with a black-handled
razor, but by some means, he
only succeeded in breaking several chunks out of the blade, so
he threw it down on the doorsill
and broke the glass. There are
iron bars up at the windows,
and he bent them enough to
admit his body, and entered the
store. As stated, Mr. Jones has
missed no goods, but a black
overcoat hung in the closet in
the rear of the store and it was
taken. The coat was left in the
store last spring by some customer and was never called for.
The burglar opened the cash
register, but found only a few
pennies, which he left. Mr.
Jones still has the razor, and he
says the owner can have it by
calling the store.
Tuesday, Oct. 13, has been
designated by the board of
directors of the Booster Club
a Road Day, and every man
who has a motor car which he
will donate for that day please
call W.W. Gowdy, and get your
route assigned. Every member
of the club who possibly can is
asked and expected to assist on
this days work, and all citizens
of the town and country surrounded, who are interested in
better roads, are to report to the
committee and will be assigned
a car. Each man is asked to
furnish one tool, either garden
rake, shovel, pick or sledge. The
object of this day is to remove
the loose rock from the streets
and roads surrounding the
town.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Change of season
As the days shorten and the
trees turn their vibrant colors we are again reminded of
the change of a season. Fall
is a time of change. Isnt it
just like God to turn the tree
leaves brilliant colors before
they fall and disappear leaving the tree bare? The late
afternoon autumn sun strikes
the bluestem grass in a way
that almost seems to make it
shine. This has been another
dry fall and the cattle kick up
dust in the lots that at sunset
makes them appear as silhouettes. Perhaps the most striking thing about autumn is the
sunset. As the sun prepares to
disappear from sight it turns a
shade of red. Then in minutes
it has set signaling the end of
another day.
Fall is a time of reflection.
It is a time when I am more
inclined to look back rather
than forward. To remember
things that over time have
become more and more important to me. Those times with
family and friends, good and
bad. When people took time
to encourage me or to educate me or to even correct me.
Times when people shared my
sorrow or joy. These are relationships I cherish and will
never forget even though most
of these people have passed
away.
Autumn perhaps more than
anything else has helped me
to understand my own mortality. Someday you and I will
go the way of our family and
friends and step into eternity.
A place that has no beginning
and will have no end. You see
man is eternal. You and I will
pass from this life but we will
Weekly
Devotional
by David Bilderback
pass into eternity.
In Genesis 1:26-27 we read,
Then God said, Let us make
man in our image in our likeness, and let them rule over the
fish of the sea and the birds of
the air, over all the livestock,
over all the earth, and over all
the creatures that move along
the ground. When God created man he gave man dominion
over everything except man
himself. Man answers to God.
This has created a struggle
between man and God. We
want to put ourselves in the
place of God. However this
can never be for the creature
will never be greater than the
creator.
To those who overcome this
struggle God makes a wonderful promise in Revelation 21:35, Now the dwelling place of
God is with man, and he (God)
will live with them. They will
be his people and God himself will be with them and be
their God. He will wipe way
every tear from their eyes.
There will be no more death
or mourning or crying or pain
for the old order of things
has passed away. Make a
commitment today to accept
Jesus Christ as your personal
Savior.
David
Bilderback:
A
Ministry on the Holiness of
God.
Duplicate Bridge results listed
Steve Brodmerkle and Anita
Dennis won the duplicate bridge
match October 1 in Garnett.
Tom Peavler and Peggy Wilcox
were in second place. Jim and
Norma Johnson came in third.
The Garnett Duplicate Bridge
Club plays each Wednesday at 1
p.m. at the Garnett Inn. All
bridge players are welcome.
3B
SOCIAL
Othick 90th birthday
The family of Mable Othick,
previously from Garnett,
would like a card shower for
her 90th Birthday. Mable was
born on Oct. 10, 1924 near
Colony, Ks.
She and her husband, Elmer
Othick, lived around Garnett
many years.
She has 3 children; Judy
(Ken)
Jackson,
Ottawa,
KS., Wayne (Nancy) Othick,
Lawrence, KS, and Virginia
(Don) Filbert, Liberty, MO.
She has several grandchildren,
great grandchildren, and great
great grandchildren. Her husband died in Nov. 1999.
Cards may reach her at: 701
South Poplar St., Apt. 411,
Ottawa, Ks. 66067.
See Rodbody
at Dales Body Shop
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 10-07-2014 /
Photo Submitted
acc
2×3
Library to discuss The
Invention of Wings
The Garnett Public Library
will hold a book discussion on
Wednesday, October 22nd at
7 p.m. This months book is
The Invention of Wings by
Sue Monk Kidd. Leading our
discussion will be Paulabeth
Henderson.
Hetty Handful Grimke, an
urban slave in early-nineteenthcentury Charleston, yearns
for life beyond the suffocating
walls that enclose her within
the wealthy Grimke household.
The Grimkes daughter Sarah,
possessed of a ravenous intellect
and mutinous ideas, has known
from an early age she is meant
to do something large in the
world, but she is hemmed in by
the limits imposed on women.
Sue Monk Kidds sweeping
new novel is set in motion on
Sarahs eleventh birthday in
1803, when she is given ownership of ten-year-old Handful,
who is to be her handmaid.
The Invention of Wings follows their remarkable journeys
over the next thirty-five years
as both strive for lives of their
own, dramatically shaping each
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.. (785) 448-3121
others destinies and forming a
complex relationship marked by
guilt, defiance, estrangement,
and the uneasy ways of love.
The books are available for
checkout at the library. The
discussions are held the fourth
Wednesday of each month at 7
p.m. in the Archer Room at the
library. Notification is posted in
case of cancellation.
RECYCLE!
anco reycle
Anderson County Recycle Trailer Schedule
3×4
October 7-25, 2014
7
Kincaid
12
Colony
13
Colony
19
8
Kincaid
14
Welda
9
Kincaid
15
Welda
10
Colony
16
11
Colony
17
18
24
25
Welda
20
21
22
23
Westphalia
Westphalia
Westphalia
Westphalia
Harris
Harris
Holidays, weather and breakdowns may alter schedule.
Any questions call (785) 448-3109
Fire Prevention Week – October 5-11, 2014
re prevention weekGarnett Fire Department OPEN HOUSE
J.D. Mersman
6×10.5
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Director of And.
Co. Emergency
Management & Rural Fire
Eric Seabolt
Colony Fire Chief
Merle Edgecomb
Harris Fire Chief
5:00pm to 7:30pm
Free Hot Dogs, Chips & Drinks
The Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary will be collecting non-perishable
food items for the Ministerial Alliance Community Food Pantry.
Please bring donations to the Open House.
Zach Hill
Greeley Fire Chief
Kenton Ludolph
Westphalia Fire Chief
Mike Burnett
Welda Fire Chief
Wayman Thompson
Kincaid Fire Chief
Daryl Patton
Bush City Fire Chief
Pat Tate
Garnett Fire Chief
Thank you to all Anderson County Fire Personnel – We appreciate your hard work and dedication.
Anderson County Farm Bureau
Garnett
(785) 448-0099
Beachner Grain, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-3712
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
SJ Auto Electric & Supply
Garnett
(785) 448-6364
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett
(785) 448-5720
Greeley Farm Implement
Greeley
(785) 867-2600
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow, Agent – Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Balanced Healthcare
Garnett
(785) 448-2422
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
Princeton – Richmond
(785) 937-2269
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Bank of Greeley
Greeley
(785) 867-2010
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett
(785) 448-2888
Personal Svc. Insurance
Iola & Moran
(620) 365-6908
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
Farm Bureau Financial Svcs
Aaron Lizer – Garnett
(785) 448-6125
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Baumans
Garnett
(785) 448-3216
We are taking applications throughout the county. Anyone interested
please contact Anderson County Fire Department at (785) 448-6797.
4B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
5B
LOCAL
I pledge my Head
to clearer thinking,
my Heart
to greater loyalty,
my Hands
to larger services,
and my Health
to better living
for my club,
my community, my
country and my
world.
4-H is a volunteer-led educational
program that supplements the teachings of home, church and school
4-H is an informal education program open to all youth 7 to 19 years of
age, regardless of whether they live
in town, the country or on a farm
4-H is kids having fun and learning
with their friends
4-H is an out-of-school volunteerled family-oriented program
4-H is an educational program
conducted through the Kansas State
University Extension Service
4-H is a powerful leader in the development of positive and responsible
youth
4-H focuses on these lifeskills: a
positive self-concept; an inquiring
mind; a concern for the community; For more than 100 years, 4-H has stood
healthy inter-personal relationships; behind the idea that youth is the single
strongest catalyst for change. What began
sound decision-making skills
as a way to give rural youth new agricultural skills, today has grown into a global
organization that teaches a range of life
Every month, 4-H members across the counskills.
try stand and recite the 4-H pledge.
4-H is dedicated to positive youth develAlthough millions of people have recited the
pledge many times during their 4-H careers, opment and helping youth step up to
many dont know its origin or history.
the challenges in a complex and changThe 4-H pledge was originally written in 1919 ing world. 4-H is dedicated to helping
by the state 4-H leader of Kansas, Otis E. Hall.
cultivate the next generation of leaders
In 1927, the pledge was adopted by a group
and tackling the nations top challenges
of 4-H delegates during the first National 4H Camp which was held in Washington, D.C. such as the shortage of skilled professionThat camp has now evolved into the National als, maintaining our global competive4-H Conference.
ness, encouraging civic involvement, and
The phrase and to my world which was becoming a healthier society.
4-H Background
History of the 4-H Pledge
added in 1973, is the only change that has been
made to the pledge since its adoption.
Farming is your livelihood, and its our business to help protect that.
Farm/Ranch
farm bureauBusiness Insurance
Crop Business Succession
2×3.5
ekae
Ethanol
2×2
How to enroll in 4-H
4-H Clover:
Contact the K-State Research and Extension office or International Symbol
leader of a 4-H Club.
K-State Research &
Extension Frontier District
#11 Garnett Office 411 S. Oak,
Garnett
Lucky 13 3rd Monday
at Glenloch Community C.J. Lacey,
Bldg
(620) 852 3047,
cj_lacey@hotmail.com
Donna Schmit,
(785) 448-7111,
Gerald Jones
Cherry Mound 2nd bschmit@embarqmail. Colony,
Wednesday at Westphalia com
jerrick85@yahoo.com
Grade School
Sandie Fritz,
Star Shooting 1st
Gaylene Comfort,
(785) 304-2529,
Tuesday at Community
(785) 448 8447,
tfes@embarqmail.com
Building or Annex
comfortg@gmail.com
Suzanna Cubit,
Donna Dieker,
(785) 313-4310,
Reva Pracht
(785) 448-0281
suzanna.cubit@gmail.com
Westphalia,
ddieker@usd365.org
jrp66093@yahoo.com
Donna Scott,
Seekers-Not-Slackers Welda, (785)448-3585
Dynamite 3rd Sunday 3rd Monday at Lone Elm
at Fire Station, Greeley
Community Building
Brandi McFarland Scott
Welda, (785)448-3585
Tanya Ewert,
Stacy Sprague,
(785) 448-8448
(620) 768-9070,
Tara Calley
csnashamia@hotmail.com sprague2003@gmail.com
Richmond, (620)363-4127
4-H
Mission
Cloverbuds
To provide educational strategies
and opportunities
for youth and adults
to work in partnership as they develop
life skills to become
healthy, self-directing contributing
members of society.
4-H Cloverbuds is a program for
5 & 6 year-olds. It is focused on
activities rather than projects. A
parent, guardian or responsible
adult must attend all meetings. The
group meets the third Wednesday
of each month at 6 pm. at the
Anderson County Annex meeting
room.
Proud to support our area 4-H Clubs!
greeley farm implement
2×3
Fueling a new generation.
Financial Services PC044-ML-1 (2-12)
Were proud to be a part of the
valley agricultural
r
community in
Anderson County,
2×2 supporting our area youth and 4-H.
leroy
2×2
Proudly supporting 4-H
youth – the future
of Anderson County.
Proudly supporting 4-H!
omalley
2×2
4H
Visit our website at www.leroycoop.coop
LeRoy Kansas
Toll Free
1-888-964-2225
E-Statements and Online Banking
LeRoy Tire Shop
Toll Free
1-888-964-2288
Anipro/Xtraformance Feeds, Robert Miller – Garnett (785) 448-4301
Garnett Publishing, Inc. – Garnett (785) 448-3121
GEM Farm Center – Garnett (785) 448-3323
Greenbush Seed & Supply – Greeley (785) 867-2160
Personal Svc. Insurance – Iola & Moran (620) 365-6908
Sandras Quick Stop – Garnett (785) 448-6602
SJ Auto Electric & Supply – Garnett (785) 448-6364
State Farm Insurance, Ryan Disbrow, Agent – Garnett (785) 448-1660
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law – Garnett (785) 448-6131
Thanks 4-H for the fine
work you do helping our
youth and community.
Available Wheat Varieties
Everst & Others
corley seed
Produces more
pounds of
2×4
meat and milk
per acre!
Clover and alfalfa seed also available.
Quality Certified Soybean & Wheat Seed
Custom Cleaning
Derrick Nelson at the
2014 Anderson County Fair
Dr. Otipoby
congratulates
the Anderson County 4-H
participants for a year well done!
Westphalia Toll Free – 1-877-489-2521 Westphalia Tire Shop – (785) 489-2216
Gridley – (620) 836-2860
Proud to support
local 4-H!
Proud to
brummel
support area
2×2
4-H Clubs!
Farm Service
barnes
2×2
8th & Oak St.
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-5720
Keegan Barnes Garnett, KS
785-304-2500
Hands Heart
Health Head
Anderson Co. Farm Bureau – Garnett (785) 448-0099
otipoby
2×4
We congratulate our local
4-H members for their
accomplishments and thank
their leaders for the many
hours they volunteer.
OCTOBER
2014
These area businesses
proudly congratulate our 4-H clubs:
4-H prepares young people
today to become responsible
citizens tomorrow. In the process,
they make valuable contributions
to our community.
Honor Show – Feeds!
BRUMMEL
www.jdparts.com www.omalleyequipment.com
the center of each leaf
to represent the head,
heart and hands; the
head trained to think,
plan and reason; the
heart trained to be
true, kind and sympathetic; and the hands
trained to be useful,
helpful and skillful.
Around 1908, the
idea of the four-leaf
clover was becoming more popular.
The word hustle was
chosen as the fourth
H because it renders easy service and
develops health and
vitality.
In 1922, the four-leaf
clover was adopted
and the word hustle
was replaced with
health to represent
the equal training of
the head, heart, hands
and health of children. The green color
of the clover was said
to stand for youth,
life and growth, and
the color white was
chosen for each H
because it symbolizes
purity.
In 1924, the Boys
and
Girls
Club
became known as 4H and the emblem
was patented. When
the patent expired in
1939, Congress passed
a law to protect the
use of the 4-H clubs
name and emblem for
unauthorized use.
We salute our area 4-H Clubs!
gssb
2×3
Call today to see how I make
insurance simple.
Securities & services offered through FBL Marketing Services, LLC+, 5400 University Ave., West Des Moines, IA 50266,
877/860-2904, Member SIPC. Farm Bureau Property & Casualty Insurance Company+*, Western Agricultural Insurance
Company+*, Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company+*/West Des Moines, IA. +Affiliates *Company providers of Farm Bureau
Garnett Publishing, Inc..
(785) 448-3121
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
I make it simple to help you select the coverage thats right for you
today and provide options for the future of your growing operation.
Aaron Lizer
305 N Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-6125
You name it,
we print it.
Millions of past and
present 4-H members
look to the 4-H clover
as a symbol of personal growth, responsibility and achievement. Why a clover to
symbolize the youth
organization?
In June 1906, when
Wright County, Iowa,
school superintendent O.H. Benson,
visited a one room
school near Clarion,
Iowa, he received
a gift of seven fourleaf clovers from the
children. Benson told
them that he had
been searching for
an emblem to represent the nations agricultural clubs and
schools and that they
had just given him
that emblem.
The four-leaf clover,
which stands for good
luck and achievement,
reminded
Benson
of his own idea of a
four-square education that included:
education,
fellowship and physical and
moral development.
Benson had three
sketches of possible
emblems in his office
– a three-leaf clover, a
four-leaf clover and a
five-pointed star.
The three-leaf clover was selected to be
the Boys and Girls
Club emblem in 1907.
An H was placed in
NATIONAL
4-H Sig Ad
3×10.5
MONTH
CHERRY MOUND DYNAMITE LUCKY 13 SEEKERS-NOT-SLACKERS STAR SHOOTING
What is 4-H?
CHERRY MOUND DYNAMITE LUCKY 13 SEEKERS-NOT-SLACKERS STAR SHOOTING
National 4-H Month
Proud to support our 4-H youth!
wolken
tire
Remember us for your next set of tires.
2×2
601 South Oak
Garnett
785-448-3212
Grant & Gaylon Corley
785-489-2505
Mobile 620-364-6050
grant@corleyseedfarms.com www.corleyseedfarms.com
beachner
2×2
6B
Notice of general election
(First published in The Anderson County
Reivew, Tuesday, October 7, 2014)
NOTICE OF GENERAL ELECTION
I, the undersigned County Clerk of the
County of Anderson, hereby give notice that on
the 4th day of November, 2014 from 7:00 a.m.
to 7:00 p.m. a general election will be held, and
in accordance with the provisions of K.S.A. 25105, the following are candidates for the various
offices. If no nomination or filing was made, the
office will be blank.
UNITED STATES SENATE
(Vote for One)
Pat Roberts, Dodge City, Republican
Greg Orman, Olathe, independent
Randall Batson, Wichita, Libertarian
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES, Dist. 2
(Vote for One)
Margie Wakefield, Lawrence, Democrat
Lynn Jenkins, Topeka, Republican
Christopher Clemmons, Shawnee, Libertarian
STATE OFFICES
GOVERNOR/LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
(Vote for One)
Paul Davis, Lawrence/Jill Docking, Wichita,
Democrat
Sam Brownback, Topeka/Jeff Colyer, Overland
Park, Republican
Keen A. Umbehr, Alma/Joshua J. Umbehr,
Wichita, Libertarian
SECRETARY OF STATE
(Vote for One)
Jean Kurtis Schodorf, Wichita, Democrat
Kris Kobach, Piper, Republican
ATTORNEY GENERAL
(Vote for One)
A.J. Kotich, Topeka, Democrat
Derek Schmidt, Independence, Republican
STATE TREASURER
(Vote for One)
Carmen Alldritt, Topeka, Democrat
Ron Estes, Wichita, Republican
COMMISSIONER OF INSURANCE
(Vote for One)
Dennis Anderson, Overland Park, Democrat
Ken Selzer, Leawood, republican
STATE REPRESENTATIVE, DISTRICT 4
(Vote for One)
Lucas B. Cosens, Fort Scott, Democrat
Marty Read, Mound City, Republican
STATE REPRESENTATIVE, DISTRICT 5
(Vote for One)
Cleon Rickel, Garnett, Democrat
Kevin Jones, Wellsville, Republican
STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION MEMBER,
DISTRICT 9
Jim Porter, Fredonia, Republican
SUPREME COURT JUSTICES
COURT OF APPEALS JUDGES
(Vote Yes or No for Retention)
QUESTION NUMBER ONE
Eric S. Rosen, Topeka, Position No. 4,
Supreme Court Justice
Lee Johnson, Caldwell, Position No. 6,
Supreme Court Justice
QUESTION NUMBER TWO
Stephen D. Hill, Topeka, Position No. 1,
Kansas Court of Appeals Judge
Patrick D. McAnany, Overland Park, Position
No. 4, Kansas Court of Appeals Judge
Kim R. Schroeder, Hugoton, Position No. 5,
Kansas Court of Appeals Judge
Henry W. Green, Jr., Leavenworth, Position
No. 7, Kansas Court of Appeals Judge
Anthony J. Powell, Wichita, Position No. 10,
Kansas Court of Appeals Judge
Tom Malone, Wichita, Position No. 11, Kansas
Court of Appeals Judge
Michael B. Buser, Overland Park, Position No.
12, Kansas Court of Appeals Judge
Melissa Taylor Standridge, Leawood, Position
No. 13, Kansas Court of Appeals Judge
DISTRICT COURT JUDGES
(Vote Yes or No for Retention)
Phillip M. Fromme, Burlington, District 4,
Division 1, District Court Judge
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
QUESTION #1
(Vote Yes or No)
COUNTY COMMISSIONER, DISTRICT 1
(Vote for One)
Jim Johnson, Garnett, Republican
Leslie D. McGhee, Kincaid, independent
TOWNSHIP OFFICES
INDIAN CREEK TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
JACKSON TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
LINCOLN TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
Terry Jasper, Garnett, Democrat
LONE ELM TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
MONROE TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
OZARK TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
PUTNAM TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
REEDER TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
RICH TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
Emma Lou Church, Kincaid, Republican
WALKER TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
WELDA TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
Paul Holman, Welda, Republican
WESTPHALIA TOWNSHIP CLERK
(Vote for One)
Darren Elliss, Westphalia, Republican
TOWNSHIP QUESTION
(Vote Yes or No)
Shall Rich Township establish and maintain
Kincaid Community Library as a public library
as authorized by Kansas Statutes Annotated
12-1218, et seq.?
POLLING PLACES
Garnett City-Precinct I, Anderson County
Community Building, North Lake Park
Garnett City-Precinct II, Anderson
County Community Building, North Lake Park
Garnett City-Precinct III, Anderson
County Annex Building, Multi-Purpose Room,
411 S. Oak
Garnett City-Precinct IV, Anderson
County Annex Building, Multi-Purpose Room,
411 S. Oak
Indian Creek Township, Colony City Hall,
Colony
Jackson Township, Anderson County
Community Building, North Lake Park
Lincoln Township, Welda Community
Building, Welda
Lone Elm Township, Selma/Kincaid
United Methodist Church, Kincaid
Monroe Township, Anderson County
Community Building, North Lake Park
Ozark Township, Colony City Hall,
Colony
Putnam Township, St. Johns Church
Hall, Greeley
Reeder Township, St. Teresa Church
Basement, Westphalia
Rich Township, Selma/Kincaid United
Methodist Church, Kincaid
Walker Township, St. Johns Church Hall,
Greeley
Washington Township, Welda Community
Building, Welda
Welda Township, Welda Community
Building, Welda
Westphalia Township, St. Teresa Church
Basement, Westphalia
Witness my hand and official seal this 1st
day of October, 2014.
Phyllis Gettler
Anderson County Election Officer
oc7t3
Notice of mortgage foreclosure
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 30, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association
Plaintiff,
vs.
Sarah Dionne a/k/a Sarah Jean Dione; Robert
Dionne; John Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Mary
Doe (Tenant/Occupant),
Defendants.
Case No. 14CV34
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
NOTICE OF SUIT
THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the abovenamed defendants and the unknown heirs,
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
creditors and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants;
the unknown officers, successors, trustees,
creditors and assigns of any defendants that
are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators,
devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and
assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians,
conservators and trustees of any defendants
that are minors or are under any legal disability;
and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns
of any person alleged to be deceased, and all
other persons who are or may be concerned.
You are notified that a Petition has been
filed in the District Court of Anderson County,
Kansas, praying to foreclose a real estate mortgage on the following described real estate:
LOT SEVENTEEN (17), IN BLOCK
TWENTY-FIVE (25), TO THE CITY OF
GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS.,
commonly known as 217 East 3rd Avenue,
Garnett, KS 66032 (the Property)
and all those defendants who have not
otherwise been served are required to plead
to the Petition on or before the 10th day
of November, 2014, in the District Court of
Anderson County,Kansas. If you fail to plead,
judgment and decree will be entered in due
course upon the Petition.
NOTICE
Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. 1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt
may be given without the prior consent of the
consumer given directly to the debt collector or
the express permission of a court of competent
jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to
collect a debt and any information obtained will
be used for that purpose.
Prepared By:
South & Associates, P.C.
Mark Mellor (KS # 10255)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS 67202
(316)684-7733
(316)684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(173007)
sp30t3
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
LOCAL
FOR RENT
CARS & TRUCKS
REAL ESTATE
FOR RENT
2 bedroom – 1 bath, ranch, nice
location. 4 references a must.
(785) 448-5893.
sp9tf
3 bedroom – 242 W. 1st. Contact
(913) 593-5956.
sp30t2*
Commercial Property – for
lease. Highway frontage, prime
location, 1,300 sq. ft. Call (785)
448-0099.
sp30tf
Two bedroom – one bath house
in Garnett, updated, detached
garage, $450 month, $450 deposit. (785) 448-2942.
sp30t2
Comfortable – 1 bedroom,
ground level apartment for rent.
Partially furnished, $350 per
month. References and deposit
required. No smoking, no pets.
(785) 448-2980.
oc7t2
REAL ESTATE
poss
1×1
property
source
Wanted – unwanted cars,
wrecked, running or damaged.
Cash for your car today. Fast,
friendly service. Cash 4 Cars.
(913) 594-0992, www.cashforcarsjunkcars.net
sp16t8*
Need reliable – oil field worker
for Anderson County w/CDL
and waterflood experience. At
least 1 year experience required.
Call 405-641-6538 or 405-810-090
0.
sp30t2
Operators/Truck
Drivers
CDL a must. Wages based
on skill. Apply at Tom Adams
Construction, 23867 NW 2000
Road.
jy22tf
Ag Mechanic with 6+ years
experience. Contact Greeley
Farm Implement, (785) 867-2600
.
jy29tf
$2000 Bonus! Oilfield drivers.
High hourly, Overtime. Class
A-CDL / Tanker. 1 year driving Experience. Home Monthly.
Paid Travel, Lodging. Relocation
not necessary. 1-800-588-2669.
www.tttransports.com
Anthony, Kansas is seeking
FT Police Officer. Must be 21.
Salary DOQ. Law Enforcement
Certification required. Excellent
benefits. More Information:
www.anthonykansas.org/jobs.
Open until filled. EOE.
bree
1×3
REAL ESTATE
schulte
1×1
2×2
HELP WANTED
2005 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT
Nicely equipped trade-in from a previous
customer…………………………………..$5988.00!
2004 Buick LeSabre Custom
Lots of power equipment, leather
interior………………………………………$5988.00!
2004 Pontiac Grand Am GT Cpe
Sharp car, electric sunroof, low
mileage…………………………………….$5988.00!
2002 Chevrolet Monte Carlo LS
Bright yellow, lots of equipment, 80,000
miles…………………………………………$4988.00!
2002 Mercury Grand Marquis GS
Great family car, lots of extras, financing
available……………………………………$4988.00!
1996 Pontiac Firebord Cpe
Deep metallic purple, good miles, runs
great…………………………………………$4988.00!
AD
1×1
Wellsville, KS (785) 883-2913
www.breeautosales.com
AD
2×2
HELP WANTED
Adamson Bros. Heating & Cooling in Ottawa is in
need of an experienced installer to join our growing
business. Pay determined by qualifications. Paid vacation, sick days, uniforms, 401k plan included.
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
Assistant
Director of Nursing
AD
Must be an RN with Long Term Care Experience
of Osawatomie
JB Construction
Joe Borntreger
Apply at 102 S. Walnut in
Ottawa or email your resume
to charlie@adamsonbros.com
2×2
HELP WANTED
AUTOS
Apply within
1615 Parker Ave.
Osawatomie
or email
Amiee_Seck@lcca.com
Power Plant Operator
AD
The City of Garnett is taking applications
for
2x2Power Plant Operator. This is a position
with rotating shifts. Complete job description
and application available at
City Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave., Garnett
and http://www.hrepartners.com/.
Salary commensurate with experience.
Crude Oil Producer operating in Miami and Linn Counties
seeks oil field pumpers, roustabout and pulling unit operators.
to train
the right candidate.
BobcatWilling
Oil
eld
No Oilfield Experience necessary.
We2x3
are looking for people that have experience in:
AD Outdoor
Power Equipment
2×3
Annual Fall Trade-In Sale
Construction
Underground utilities
Backhoe and Skid Steer
Must have Valid Drivers License
Must pass drug test
Taking Trade-Ins On More Models Than Ever!
BRING IN YOUR OLD SAW – RUNNING OR NOT
We offer competitive pay
and benefits after probationary
period including:
Uniforms provided
Paid holidays
Paid vacation
Simple IRA with company match
$100 OFF
AND GET UP TO
SELECT MODEL SAWS!
SALE ENDS 11-30-14
HECKS SMALL ENGINE REPAIR
6 Mi. North of Westphalia
785-893-1620
Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-6p.m.
Saturdays by appointment.
Contact us today
to interview.
Office: (913) 837-5199
Fax: (913) 837-4988
Email: bobcatoilrob@gmail.com
HURRICANE SERVICES, INC.
Services has grown to be one
ADHurricane
in Eastern Kansas.
2×3
BECOME A PROFESSIONAL
BUSINESS OWNER IN
YOUR COMMUNITY
Hurricane Services, Inc., is looking for experienced rig hands
or individuals that are willing to learn the trade. Must have
include paid vacation, paid
holidays, uniforms, advancement opportunities and 401K.
Hurricane Services is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
K-Lawn is a part-time business opportunity providing lawn
fertilization and weed and insect control. And, were looking to
add a few quality dealers to our network.
If you feel you have what it takes, and are interested in owning
your own business, call us today at 800-445-9116, or visit us
online today at www.k-lawn.com to learn the full story.
Kugler Company
PO Box 1748
McCook, Nebraska 69001
www.k-lawn.com
new.ads.multiple_Layout 1 10/10/12 1:24 PM Page 8
Start working today!
AD
Focus Workforces is interested in hiring the right canddates for the right job. We are looking for motivated
2×4
individuals that are ready for a new challenge and a step
Now Offering Clear Spans up to 150'
KL-103.indd 1
9/29/14 3:1
Pay up to
forward to success!
Currently hiring for a large
Distribution Center in
Ottawa, Ks.
10/
$
hr
With flexible scheduling!
Apply at
www.workatfocus.com
in person at 1529 N. Davis Rd.
in Ottawa, or call 785-832-7000
to schedule a time to come in.
The New Standard in Size and Strength
Now offering Hybrid Buildings engineered for clear spans up to
150. Hybrid buildings offer the best of both worlds, aesthetic
value and insulating properties of wood, combined with the
strength and size capabilities associated with steel.
Eight offices serving Kansas
800-447-7436
mortonbuildings.com
2012 Morton Buildings, Inc. All rights reserved. A listing of GC licenses available at mortonbuildings.com/licenses.aspx. REF CODE 043.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
SERVICES
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Can You Dig It? Heavy
Equipment Operator Training!
3 Week Program. Bulldozers,
Backhoes, Excavators. Lifetime
Job Placement Assistance with
National Certifications. VA
Benefits Eligible! (866) 740-7697
Earn $500 to $1,000 a day Selling
Funeral Ins. To Seniors. Daytime
Market. Leads Furnished.
Complete Training. Daily Pay;
Health Dental Ins. Provided.
Call 1-888-713-6020
Focus Workforces is hiring for a
large distribution center. Must be
able to work 8-10 hr. shifts. Pay
is up to $7.25-$11/HR. Apply at
www.workatfocus.com 785-2281555
Butler Transport Your Partner
In Excellence Drivers Needed.
Great hometime $650.00 sign on
bonus! All miles paid. 1-800-5287825 or www.butlertransport.co
m
Driver Trainees Needed!
Become a driver for Stevens
Transport! No experience needed! New drivers earn $800+
per week! Paid CDL training!
Stevens covers all costs! 1-888589-9677 drive4stevens.com
Drivers – Start with our training or continue your solid
career. You Have Options!
Company Drivers, Lease
Purchase or Owner Operators
Needed (888) 670-0392 www.
CentralTruckDrivingJobs.com
JOIN OUR TEAM!
SERVICES
SERVICES
AD
1×2
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m.,
105 1/2 East 4th Ave., (620) 2282597 or (785) 241-0586. nv21tf
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
Garrison Concrete Inc
Dave Garrison Jr. Dave Garrison Sr.
Estimator/Supervisor
Owner
785-393-0806
785-393-2833
www.garrisonconcreteinc.com
Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express
AD
1×1
(913) 594-2495
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
Housekeeping Assistant
Golden
heights
dietary
Housekeeping
Assistant
Needed
Part time to Full time
2×2
Days, Evenings and Every Other Weekend
LPNs and/or RNs
PRN
Apply in person at:
Richmond Healthcare &
Rehabilitation Center, LLC
340 South St.
Richmond, KS
Your Needs, Our Passions…Every Day!
Dietary Aide/Cook
GoldenDietary
Heights
– HouseAide/Cook Needed
Part time to full time
keeping
days, evenings and every other weekend.
2×2
Call with any questions 785-448-2434
Apply on-line or come by for an application
Golden Heights, 101 N. Pine, Garnett, KS
Direct Support Professional
AD
Lakemary Center is a not-for-profit organization serving individuals
with developmental disabilities. LMC ideal candidate profile
2×3
includes maturity, reliability, honesty, good problem solving and
communication skills, a demonstrated interest in assisting people
with disabilities, ability to cope with the physical demands of the
job, and basic language and math skills. LMC offers competitive
wage and benefits. Currently, we have direct care positions in our
Paola Childrens Residential Program evenings and overnights.
Apply on-line:
www.lakemaryctr.org.
Lakemary Center, Inc.
100 Lakemary Drive Paola, Ks., 66071
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems, Inc. is a leading manufacturer of large
custom fabricated steel products for the energy, chemical and aerospace industries.
Garnett, KS
WELDER/FABRICATOR C
Candidates main job duties will be setup, adjust, and operate all types of manual,
semi-automatic, and automatic welding equipment (i.e. SAW, SMAW, GMAW,
of passing RT and UT requirements. Perform pre-heat, post-heat, and all types of
provide an acceptable surface condition. Maintain accurate welding and material
documents, weld symbols, and WPSs.
Working Knowledge of different types of cutting equipment.
seeking a challenge and opportunity to innovate are urged to apply in person at
AD
2×4
AD
2x2QUALIFIED CDL DRIVERS WANTED!!!
WELL
Experience is preferred.
Call with any questions 785-448-2434
Apply on-line or come by for an application
Golden Heights, 101 N. Pine, Garnett, KS
Hopper bottom company with regional, dedicated
runs, home on weekends. Benefits include, paid
vacation, health insurance and safety incentive bonus.
Call Dan @ 620-437-6616, Tina @ 620-836-2700 or
send request for application by email to
dredding@rctruckinginc.com
HURRICANE SERVICES, INC.
Services has grown to be one
ADHurricane
in Eastern Kansas.
2×3
Farm Technician
AD
2×3
Primary responsibilities include bleeding, caring for and
Thermo Fisher Scientific has an immediate opening for a
Farm Technician in its Garnett, Kansas facility.
Hurricane Services, Inc., is looking for experienced CDL
drivers with tanker endorsement, prefer Class A with Hazmat.
Clean driving record and pass pre-employment drug screen.
advancement opportunities and 401k.
maintaining sheep and maintenance of related farm property,
equipment and facilities.
Qualified candidates will possess a HS diploma or equivalent
from an accredited institution, as well as technical training or
at least 2 years related farm experience.
Interested persons should apply on-line at
www.thermofisher.com.
Hurricane Services is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
We are an equal opportunity employer, M/F/V/D.
Anderson County Sheriff Office
Is Now Taking Applications For
AD
FULL TIME JAIL MATRON/FEMALE
Training Services, Inc.
AD
Full-time Direct Support Professionals
2×4
Serving Coffey, Osage and Franklin Counties in Kansas
Until 10-30-2014
2×4
Applications are available at the Anderson County Sheriff
COF Training Services, Inc., a non-profit organization
providing services and supports to developmentally
disabled adults, is seeking full-time Direct Support
Professionals in our Burlington Residential Department.
Hours include overnights, evenings and/or weekends.
Applicants should have an interest in working with
individuals with disabilities. A high school diploma/
GED is required, along with a good driving record. COF
offers competitive wages along with excellent benefits
to include medical, dental and life insurance, KPERS,
paid holidays and paid time off. Apply at 1415 S. 6th St.,
Burlington, Ks., 66839. Application deadline is October
8th, 2014. Drug free workplace. Pre-employment and
random drug testing is required. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Office, 135 E. 5th, Garnett, KS 66032, Mon. – Fri.,
785-448-5678. We are looking for a Female/Matron which
will be subject to doing pat downs and strip searches of
female inmates along with other detention officer duties.
Must have a high school diploma or equivalent, be able to
obtain a Kansas Drivers License. Applicants will be subject to
a battery of tests including an extensive background check.
Shifts are 12 hrs. and you will be subject to working days,
nights, holidays, weekends, swings and alternating shifts.
Starting pay $13.08/hr. Anderson County is an Equal
Opportunity Employer and the position is Veterans
Preference Eligible (VPE),
State Law – K.S.A. 73-201.
DRAFT & DRIVING
HORSE & COLT AUCTION
a non-profit organization providing services and supports
to developmentally disabled adults, is seeking a
wendt
BATES COUNTY PRODUCE RICH HILL, MO
From Rich Hill take Hwy. A to PP then South on PP 3 miles
2×5
Saturday, October 11, 2014 9:30 a.m.
COF Training Services, Inc.,
AD VENDING ROUTE DRIVER.
2×5
Draft, Driving Horses & Colts
208 N. Iron St., Paola, KS 66071 www.tfes.com EEO Employer/vet/Disabled
Training Services, Inc.
AD
Part-time Direct Support Professionals
2×4
Serving Coffey, Osage and Franklin Counties in Kansas
COF Training Services, Inc., a non-profit organization
providing services and supports to developmentally
disabled adults, is seeking part time Direct Support
Professionals in our Burlington Residential Department.
Hours include evenings and/or weekends. Applicants
should have an interest in working with individuals
with disabilities. A high school diploma/GED is required,
along with a good driving record. COF offers
(Horses must be Draft or Driving Stock or broke to Drive)
All non-cataloged horses will be consigned &
sold in the order they arrive on Auction day!
$15 consignment fee + commission on all Horses.
9:30 a.m. – New & Used Tack (NO TACK CONSIGNMENTS)
11:00 a.m. – Small Animals
12:00 p.m. selling HORSES
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Original coggins test papers must be
present day of sale. VET ON SITE.
To order horse catalog or to consign items,
call: Dennis Wendt 913-285-0076
Or write to:
Andrew Schrock, 10519 E. Albert Rd., Rich Hill, MO 64779 or
Ethan Brubacker, 2853 S. 1125 Rd., Rich Hill, MO 64779
View this and other Auctions online @www.wendtauction.com
TERMS OF AUCTION: Cash, check or credit card w/proper ID. Sales
tax will be charged. Statements made day of auction take precedence
over written materials. All items sell as-is, where-is & without warranty
expressed or implied. Owners or auction company not responsible for
accidents, theft or loss of sale items.
competitive wages. Apply at 1415 S. 6th St., Burlington,
drug testing is required. Equal Opportunity Employer.
Primary responsibilities are to restock, clean and maintain
company owned vending equipment on a designated route, as
well as maintain customer service and relations. This person
is also responsible for keeping company vehicle properly
stocked, completing route within the normally scheduled
hours, keeping vehicle properly maintained, and obeying all
traffic laws.
REQUIREMENTS OF THIS POSITION INCLUDE:
Valid Kansas Drivers license (standard operators license)
Minimum of five (5) years driving experience with clean
record
Ability to operate a two or four wheeled hand-truck.
Excellent customer service skills and organizational skills
Able to work independently, responsible for route, work
unsupervised 98% of the work day
Understands importance of meeting deadlines and
commitments
Excellent communication skills
Must be able to work typical route schedule of 5 days
per week, 8-12 hour shifts, including early morning
hours
Must be able to pass background checks, drivers license
record check and drug test.
Must be able to lift up to 50 pounds
Similar job experience preferred but not required
COF offers excellent benefits to include medical, dental and
life insurance, KPERS, paid holidays and paid time off.
Apply at 1516 N. Davis Avenue, Ottawa, KS 66067
or at 1415 S. 6th St., Burlington, KS 66839
Ks., 66839. Application deadline is October 8th, 2014.
Drug free workplace. Pre-employment and random
Check out our
Monthly Specials
computer
COMPUTER
experts
1x2WORK
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
part time
SERVICES
Work Done Right
Garrison
Replacement Repair Brand New
AD
1×1
1×2
AD
1×1
carestaf
1×4
Housekeeping
richmond
part time
1×3 CNA
7B
LOCAL
Dennis Wendt
913-285-0076
913-898-3337
Bill McNatt
913-849-3519
Rick James
913-594-2980
Applications accepted through 10/17/2014.
Drug free workplace.
Pre-employment and random drug/alcohol testing is required.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
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our
Services
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, October 7, 2014
LOCAL
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AD
1×7.5
FARM & AG
WANTED
Wanted: 15 bales good clean
staw. (785) 448-4437. oc7tf
Wanted – unwanted cars,
wrecked, running or damaged.
Cash for your car today. Fast,
friendly service. Cash 4 Cars.
(913) 594-0992, www.cashforcars-lawrence-kansas-junk-carremoval
sp16t8*
AD
1×2
HAPPY ADS
LAWN AND GARDEN
WANTED
LAWN & GARDEN
MISC. FOR SALE
MISC FOR SALE
Astro – camper shell, fits Ford
and Chevy shortbed. Great condition. (785) 304-0251.
oc7tf
Lennox – forced air furnace,
165,000 btu. (785) 835-6489.
oc7t1*
bennett
1×1
Bennetts Lawn Service
Mow Trim Clean Gutters
Call Bob at
(785) 304-0251 or
(785) 448-6534
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2
Happiness is . . . Chili contest at
Farmers Market! Last week for
pumpkins, apples, baked goods,
local meats, honey and vegetables. Downtown Thursday, 4:307pm.
oc7t1
Happiness is . . . Being a volunteer at Anderson County
Hospital!! Please join us
Wednesday, October 8th in
the Archr Room at the Garnett
Library for our Membership
Luncheon at 12:00 p.m. We
encourage everyone interested
to attend and find out about
new opportunities that are available in the new hospital as well
as the other activities that we
offer. RSVP to Nancy Horn at
448-6544 or Kathy Finkenbinder
at 205-7108.
sp23t3
Happiness is . . . Breakfast
at the Garnett VFW 7am-10am,
Saturday, October 11. Biscuits
and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage and eggs.
oc7t1
MAKE MONEY USE
THE
CLASSIFIEDS!
purplewave.com
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KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
INTERNET AUCTION
THURSDAY, OCT. 16
Bidding starts to close
at 10 a.m. CDT
300+ ITEMS SELLING WITHOUT RESERVE! Including:
autos, mowers, tractors, utility trucks, air compressors, fuel/lube, roller,
skid steers, trailers and more. 10% buyers premium. 866.608.9283
Octoberfest- 2014 Model Clearance Sale
2015 Model Intro – Oct. 10, 11, &12
Authorized Traeger Grill Dealer. Stop by for Lunch!
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30, Sat. 9-5, Sun. 12-5
www.4SeasonsRV.com
Over
100OCTOBER
units in14_Layout
stock or
on order
– ALL
ON1SALE!
2"
KS Press
1 9/30/14
6:55 AM
Page
HOME FREE
KALEIGH GLANTON OPENS
Wichita / The Voice
FRI, OCT 10, 8pm
AD
2×4
HEART
FRI, OCT 24, 8pm
CAMERON
CARPENTER
SAT, NOV 8
TRACE
ADKINS
SAT, DEC 6
MICHAEL
RODNEY CARRINGTON MCDONALD
FRI, NOV 7, 7pm
stiefeltheatre.org
TUES, DEC 16
SEE THE STARS UP CLOSE
151 S. Santa Fe, Salina 785-827-1998 M-F, 9-5
AD
2×2
Did you know junk mail
mass mailings have as little as
a 2% response rate with customers?
Advertise where people read.
(785) 448-3121
AD
2×3
AD
2×4
Eight
FARM & AG
FARM AND AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (816) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
mc25tf
AD
2×5
Stay in the loop
with daily news
updates and breaking
news from the
Anderson County area.
112 W. 6th Garnett, KS (785) 448-3121
FALL IS IN THE AIR
43rd Annual
SUGAR MOUND
ARTS & CRAFTS
FESTIVAL
Mound City, Kansas
OVER 450 BOOTHS
Open 9am – 6pm Saturday Open 9am – 5pm Sunday
Dont take the chance.
FREE PARKING NO ADMISSION FEE
Taste tempting foods at the festival. All arts and crafts
original and homemade and also an Antique Barn.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11th
Jayhawk-Linn High School – 5K Run, Adults. Also 5K Run for kids 12 & Under.
Contact Robert Kellstadt (913) 795-2901.
Saturday October 11th – Parade at 10:00am
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12th
Union Church Services on grounds – 8:00am.
No WIFI or ATM available at the fairgrounds
Limited parking at Fairgrounds, Busing from Jayhawk-Linn High School,
Elementary School and Business District. NO DOGS PLEASE. For other
information call: 913-795-3003 or visit www.sugarmoundartscrafts.com
Twin Motors Ford Service Department welcomes all Ford customers in the Southeast Kansas area to
our service department. We offer complete service on all Ford valued products, with two fully trained
Master Ford Technicians. We offer all the latest and updated Ford tools and equipment. Our technicians have no problem fixing your vehicle right
the first time here at Twin Motors Ford in Iola,
Ks. Where it does make a difference. Please call
us for your next service 1800-407-TWIN or
(620) 365-3193. Gene Becker, Service Manager
or Jarred Brutchin, Parts Manager.
TwinMotorsFordInc@twinford.kscoxmail.com.
October 11th & 12th, 2014
LINN COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
Regular maintenance- less worry.

