Anderson County Review — September 12, 2024
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 12, 2024. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
Football / volleyball / CROSS COUNTRY / golf
Season previews of area high school sports teams starting on Page 8…
Place address label here
Probitas, Veritas,
Integritas In Summa
C O P Y P R I C E O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
September 12, 2024
SINCE 1865 158th Year, No. 34
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,KS,KS,and
and
communities.
E-statements & Internet Banking
www.garnett-ks.com | (785) 448-3121 | review@garnett-ks.com
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
County aims for new tax sale before office changes hands
Project aims to get tax
delinquent properties back
on countys paying tax rolls
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Anderson County
Commissioners have approved a
resolution for an upcoming foreclosure and forced sale of county delinquent property which will hopefully
take place before the retiring county
treasurer leaves office this coming
January.
A resolution setting up the next
tax sale was adopted Sept. 3, defining the countys intent to pursue the
next phase in the ongoing effort to
get delinquent properties back on the
county tax rolls by seizing them and
selling them off to new owners.
The complicating factor this time
around is that presumptive county
treasurer Ida McClelland, who won
the Republican primary in August
and faces no declared opposition in
the November general election, hasnt
handled a tax sale from the office
before. The hope is that outgoing
county treasurer Dena McDaniel can
provide training for the mechanics of
the sale before she leaves office.
Tax sales require an extensive notification and legal filing process to
allow the present owner to redeem the
property by paying the back taxes and
penalties. If the condemnation is pursued and the parcel sold at auction,
most of the back taxes are typically
lost but the parcel is put back on the
SEE SALE ON PAGE 5
BY DANE HICKS
Fair results section delayed
after newspaper has to argue
for names of 4H exhibitors
THE KANSAS INFORMER
OTTAWA Kansas State University
Frontier District Extension officials have
released a disputed segment of county fair records they denied weeks ago
for publication in the Reviews annual
Anderson County Fair results section
records which until this year had been
provided for publication for as much as
the past 75 years in order to recognize 4H
exhibitors in the county fair.
Attorneys for the Review and for the
Frontier Extension District exchanged
letters on the Kansas Open Record Act
issue after Frontier officials twice denied
the Reviews request for first and last
names of 4H exhibitors age 13 and under,
claiming the information was protected
under a federal online childrens privacy law enacted in 1998. It was the
first time in 25 years since the federal
law was passed that Extension officials
had used it to deny the records. Records
were also denied to the Osage County
Herald-Chronicle for its fair results section. Osage County is also in the Frontier
District.
A limited straw poll of other state
newspapers by the Review found all
other publications contacted in Kansas
received the same records this year they
had traditionally obtained from their
local extension offices.
those that have been delinquent for a
number of years.
In that 2022 sale, county treasurers
office records say the county brought
in $56,920.00 all together for those parcels. Associated fees were $6162.91.
The county was able to recover and
pay off $22,126.63 worth of the delinquent taxes and then had to send out
refunds for any over-payment since
state law says counties cant condemn
and sell foreclosed properties at a
Naked church
goer released from
jail, due in court
(clothed) today
After 75 years,
4Hers names
withheld from
county fair coverage
BY DAN THALMAN
tax rolls under different ownership.
While new owners can often pick up
those properties at a bargain, theyre
assessed a bloc of fees to cover some
of the administrative and publication
costs in addition to the bid price.
Over the past decade or so
Anderson County has scheduled a
delinquent tax sale about every three
years. The most recent sale was held
in 2022, when 18 parcels totaling some
$46,000 in back taxes, interest and
fees delinquencies were sold at auction. Condemned properties tend to be
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / JESSIE DUNCAN
Greeley Smokeoff volunteers recognized Greeley maintenance
worker Tim Kuhlman as this years Honor Volunteer for the 2024
event held last weekend. From left above Abbie Feuerborn,
Kuhlman, Eric Lickteig, Pam Dalsing, Alexey Lickteig, Ty Lytle, Leslie
Lickteig and Kenny Katzer. At right, the Smokeoff was THE place to
hang out if you were a kid, as Haley Stifter, 10, Zayne Henderson,
9, Adelynn Skinner, 10, Jasmine Duncan,10, Lovelinn Smith, 12 (on
back row) took time out to pose for a photo.
SEE NAMES ON PAGE 7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT The man police say
a local couple discovered passed
out and naked in a Garnett church
is free from the
Anderson County
Jail on a personal
recognizance bond
after Garnetts city
court revised his
bond last week.
Smith had been
held in the county
Smith jail on a $300 bond
for nearly a week
after he was found
unclothed and apparently under
the influence when a local couple
showed up at Holy Angels Catholic
Church August 27 on an errand. He
was arrested on charge of disorderly conduct, and failed to make the
amount of the bond issued from city
court.
The incident raised the topic of a
general lack of state law in Kansas
dealing with public nudity, and the
patchwork ordinances in various
cities in regard to going bare if not
in violation of a defined sex crime.
Garnett Police Chief Kurt King said
he had asked city attorney Terry
Solander to consider a city ordinance for submission to city commissioners.
Newly-appointed Garnett Municipal Court Judge Steve Wilson
recently made waves among city
court patrons earlier this year after
he instituted dress and decorum
requirements during city court proSEE SMITH ON PAGE 2
Steam-powered tractor to highlight vintage
machinery show at Lake Garnett Oct. 4-5
BY SUSAN WETTSTEIN
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
taken over by specialized gas and
diesel-powered equipment.
GARNETT A 1906 16 horsepower
In keeping with the events feaAdvance steam engine tractor will be tured Minneapolis Moline tractors,
on exhibit and demonstration at this the Flywheelers have also garnered
years Anderson County Flywheelers a 1920s Minneapolis Moline Prairie
Gas Engine & Tractor Show, to be
Tractor. The Prairie
held on Friday
models of MM tracand
Saturday,
tors were also the
October 4-5 in the
workhorses of their
City of Garnetts
day, helping farmers
North Lake Park.
increase productiviSteam engine
ty from small family
tractors such as
farms to large-scale
the 1906 Advance
operations breaking
would have been
new ground on the
used for several
prairies.
important agriThe Flywheelers
Courtesy FarmCollector.com
cultural
and
are
ramping
up
industrial tasks A steam-powered tractor similar efforts to provide a
in the early 20th to this one restored by Chad unique experience
century, includ- Atteberry and Jerry Detwiler of for the area youth on
ing threshing, Wichita will be on display at the Friday, October 4th
plowing, sawmill Anderson County Flywheelers with Education Day,
operations, road event.
which invites all high
construction and
school and elementahauling,
pullry classes as well as
ing heavy loads.
homeschooled stuConsidered the workhorses of the dents to engage in hands-on activ20th century agriculture and indus- ities, exhibits and demonstrations,
try, these steam engine tractors such as a cider press, corn shelling
performed tasks that would later be and grinding, shingle making, rope
making and event photo booth. A
highlight of the event is the threshing and baling demonstration held
at 9 am and 1:30 pm daily. Listen and
learn about how Garnetts North Lake
Park was built, a presentation by the
Anderson County Historical Society.
Teachers and those that homeschool
are encouraged to contact Helen
Norman, 785-448-8745 in advance, by
September 24th, to schedule class
tours on Friday which includes free
ice cream and more surprises for the
kids who attend on Friday.
The event also has small engine
demonstrations and over 100 tractors on display. A tractor parade, and
two tractor pulls, one a pedal power
tractor pull for the kids (prizes),
and an antique tractor pull (awards
cash prizes) at the pulling arena will
take place on Saturday. Enjoy the
tractor parade, swap meet, food and
craft vendors and more both Friday
and Saturday. Event merchandise,
including shirts and hats will be for
sale.
No admission is charged. There
are no vendor fees. Participants of the
antique tractor pull pay $15 per
SEE SHOW ON PAGE 5
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / DANE HICKS
Crest cross country runners Josie Walter, Peyton Schmidt, Aubrey Allen, Kallei
Robb freeze seconds before the start of the womens competition at the Jerry
Howarter Invitational Meet in Garnett last week. Results from the meet are published on Page 16 of todays Review.
NATIONAL FARM SAFETY WEEK FEATURE
today on Page 13
2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 will have breakfast Sunday, September 15, from
9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Biscuits and
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage & eggs will be served.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY TO
MEET SEPTEMBER 12
The monthly meeting of the
Anderson County Historical
Society will be held on
Thursday, September 12 at
the Community Building in the
North Park. The meeting will
start with a potluck dinner at
6:30 p.m. and the program will
follow. Everyone is welcome to
attend.
CONCERTS IN THE PARK
This Thursdays Concerts in the
Park series live music will be
provided by Hunter Crane on
Thursday from 6 p.m.-8 p.m. at
Donna Harris Park in downtown
Garnett.
GARNETT BPW MEETING
Garnett BPW would like to invite
you to our upcoming meeting
on Tuesday, September 17th,
6 p.m. at the Archer Room in
the Garnett Library. Our guest
speaker is Kansas BPW State
President, Leanna Grater.
Please come and bring a friend.
Any questions contact Helen at
785-448-8745
AMERICAN LEGION BINGO
Bingo at American Legion Post
48 Garnett will be held every
Tuesday, starting time at 6:30
p.m.
MODEL T CLUB TO MEET
The East Central Kansas Model
T Club meets the 2nd Thursday
of the month. The ECKMTs will
meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday
September 12th in the conference room of the Burlington
Kansas Library.
HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE DEC. 1
The Garnett BPW is holding their
annual Holiday Boutique in conjunction with the Friends of the
Library Homes Tour on Sunday,
December 1st, the Boutique will
be held at the Senior Center,
For more information, please
call 785-448-8745 or email
hnorman59@gmail.com
CORNHOLE TOURNAMENTS
Everything Thursday their will
be a cornhole tournament at the
Garnett VFW, 1507 S. Elm St. It
is a family friendly event open
to everyone. Registration begins
at 6 p.m., tournament begins at
6:30 p.m. Entry fee is $15.
UNPLANNED PREGNANCY
Advice & Aid Pregnancy Center in
Overland Park helps women and
their families make an educated decision about an unplanned
pregnancy by providing evidence-based, medical information about parenting, adoption
and abortion. Call (913) 962-0200
or visit www.adviceandaid.com.
SMITH…
FROM PAGE 1
ceedings. Wilson, who runs
unopposed in the November
election for the county attorneys slot in Anderson County,
noted court proceedings needed to be approached with
respect since they represented
the local example of the rule
of law, a basic premise of the
United States.
STATEWIDE
ADVERTISING
1×2
AD
Send your ad to more
than 100 Kansas
newspapers for as little
as $300. Ask about
other states too!
785-448-3121
(785) 842- 6440
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
SEPTEMBER 3, 2024
Chairman Leslie McGhee called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00
AM on September 3, 2024 at the
Anderson County Commission Room.
Attendance: Leslie McGhee, Present:
David Pracht, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The pledge of allegiance was recited. Minutes from the
previous meeting were approved as
presented.
Road & Bridge
Ethan Lickteig, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission.
They discussed road concerns and he
reported on a used motor grader he
will be checking into possibly purchasing.
Zoning
Carol Hermreck voiced concern
regarding the driveway for a new surplus store that is being built across
the road from her house. She would
like the driveway to be put as far
west as possible. She also would
like the speed limit to be decreased
because of the excessive traffic that
travel that road. After discussion
the commissioners would like Ethan
to lower that speed limit to 40 mph
from the city limits on 1700 Rd to
run past 7th St Grocery Store. Tom
Young, Zoning Director presented a
special use permit for recommendation. Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
approve resolution 2024-18 approving
zone change application #ZC2024-02
(B Miller) to allow for a 60X140 building for a surplus store. All voted yes.
Dane Hicks questioned the county
commissioners and Tom Young on
solar regulations. They informed him
that they are still looking them over
and have not made a decision yet.
Sheriff
Vernon Valentine, County Sheriff
reported to the commissioners that
he authorized the purchase of a 911
voice recorder system in the amount
of $25,483.00 from Voice Products Inc
out of the jail/sheriff reserve fund.
Executive Session
Commissioner Pracht moved
and
Commissioner Mersman
seconded to enter into executive
session for non-elected personnel
for 15 minutes. All voted yes. The
Commissioners and Troy Armstrong,
EMS Director were in attendance.
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
re-enter into open meeting. All voted
yes. No action taken.
Tax Sale
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
approve resolution 2024-19 authorizing the county counselor to conduct a
sale of properties for nonpayment of
taxes. All voted yes.
Emergency Management
Mark
Locke,
Emergency
Management Coordinator presented a bid he received for radios.
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded
the purchase of 137 used radios from
Used Radios.com for $69,160.90 to
come out of the emergency management fund. All voted yes.
Employee Benefits
Rhonda Fernandez, PIC presented
the 2025 employee benefits renewal
to the commissioners. She reported
that the county had a great claim year
and that the BCBS premiums were
still increasing by 6%. There was also
a slight raise in the countys dental
premium. The commissioners would
like to see the figures for a self-funded
health program. Rhonda will get that
information from BCBS and report
back in a week.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM due
to no further business.
ANDERSON COUNTY LAND TRANSFERS
Cheryl L Highberger-Daldrup,
Cheryl L Highberger A/K/A and Bruce
James Daldrup to Cheryl L HighbergerDaldrup and Bruce James Daldrup:
Lots 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15,
16, 17, 18, 19, 20 & 21 blk 2 Town of
Westphalia, except the east 56 of said
tract of land.
Lewis L Kennard and Rolena
Kennard to Justin Metcalfe and Crystal
Metcalfe: Lot 8 blk 76 City of Garnett.
Anthony E Hermreck and Brenda
A Hermreck to David F Bach Trustee
and David F Bach Revocable Trust
Dated 9/5/2008: A tract of land located
in a portion of the se/4 of 8-20-20 being
more particularly described as follows:
beginning at the ne/4 of said se/4;
thence s023632 e along the east
line of said se/4 a distance of 883.12
feet; thence n572535 w a distance
of 1544.09 feet to the north line of said
se/4; thence n874119 e along said
north line a distance of 1262.03 feet
to the pob. said tract contains 12.793
acres, more or less.
Justin Diehm and Autumn Diehm
to Wendy David and Jeremy David:
Commencing 70 rods west of the ne
corner of the ne/4 of 31-19-21, thence
running south 200 feet, thence west
about 500 feet to the east line of main
street in the town of Greeley, Kansas,
thence north 200 feet, thence east 500
feet to the pob, less highway.
Sarah Janes Akes to Dominic
Ireland: Lots 15, 16 and the w/2 of lot
17 in block 17 in the City of Garnett.
Kent C Howerton and George H
VInnie to Carol Jane Hiestand: Lots 21,
22, 23 & 24 blk 15 City of Garnett.
Carol Jane Hiestand to Carol Jane
Hiestand and Jesse Ray Linzay: Lots
21, 22, 23 & 24 blk 15 City of Garnett.
Barbara J Welsh to Ty George
Turner and Anna Catherine Turner: E2
lot 15 & all lots 16 & 17 blk 13 City of
Garnett.
Dudley R Feuerborn Trustee and
Dudley R Feuerborn Trust Dated
7/25/2000 to City of Garnett: A tract of
land located in ne4 29-20-20, described
as follows: beg at secor ne4 said section; thence s874942w on south line
of said ne4 a distance of 522.00 feet;
thence n023056w to south r/w line of
us 169 hwy a distance of 478.64 feet;
thence n632139e on said south r/w
line a distance of 399.10 feet; thence
continuing on said south r/w line on a
curve to left with a radius of 2924.90
feet and an arc length of 407.64 feet
on a chord of n585533e a distance
of 407.31 feet to east line of said ne4;
thence s023056e on said east line to
pob a distance of 840.80 feet; contains
10.75 acres more or less.
Caldwell Farms Inc to Secretary
of Transportation of State of Kansas:
(A) A tract of land in nwfr4 6-21-20 as
follows: com at necor said quarter section; thence on an assumed bearing of
south 003215 east 283.78 feet along
east line of said quarter section to easterly existing r/w line of us-169 and pob;
first course, thence continuing south
003215 east 423.97 feet along said
easterly line; second course, thence
south 243918 west 152.69 feet; third
course, thence south 121144 west
166.83 feet to said easterly r/w line;
fourth course, thence on a curve of
3520.10 feet radius to right, an arc distance of 733.30 feet with a chord which
bears north 072715 east 731.98
feet along said easterly r/w line to
pob; tract contains 0.65 acre, more or
less; (b)a tract of land in nrfr4 6-21-20
as follows: com at nwcor said quarter
section, thence on an assumed bearing
of south 003215 east 283.78 feet
along west line of said quarter section
to easterly existing r/w line of us-169
and pob; first course, thence continuing
south 003215 east 423.97 feet along
said west line; second course, thence
north 243918 east 170.09 feet; third
course, thence north 134235 east
424.47 feet; fourth course, thence north
065958 east 148.84 feet to north
line of said quarter section; fifth course,
thence south 875800 west 112.34
feet along said north line to said easterly r/w line; sixth course, thence on
a curve of 3520.10 feet radius to left,
an arc distance of 298.17 feet with a
chord which bears south 155055
west 298.08 feet along said easterly
r/w line to pob; contains 1.67 acres,
more or less; (c) a tract of land in sw4
31-20-20 as follows: com at swcor
said quarter section, thence on an
assumed bearing of north 875825
east 386.79 feet along south line of
said quarter section to necor nw4 6-2120, thence north 875800 east 84.12
feet along said south line to easterly existing r/w line of us-169 and
pob; first course, thence continuing
north 875800 east 112.34 feet along
said south line; second course, thence
north 065958 east 79.19 feet; third
course, thence north 012439 east
235.06 feet; fourth course, thence
north 280753 east 446.15 feet; fifth
course, thence north 352930east
533.82 feet to said easterly r/w line;
sixth course, thence south 425444
west 137.81 feet along said easterly
r/w line; seventh course, thence on
a curve of 3520.10 feet radius to left,
an arc distance of 1188.22 feet with
a chord which bears south 275644
west 1182.59 feet along said easterly
r/w line to pob; contains 0.78 acre,
more or less.
Larry N Mills to Larry N Mills and PJ
Mills: Lots 17 & 18 in block 33 to the
City of Garnett.
Eric Glaze and Luana Glaze to
Heather Wilson: N2 lots 1 & 2 blk 28
City of Garnett.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
(as of August 21, 2024)
Joseph Wilper was booked into jail
on October 20, 2023.
Chester Casida was booked into jail
on April 5, 2024.
Kevin Labelle was booked into jail
on April 25, 2024.
Joshua Caddell was booked into jail
on May 12, 2024.
Christopher Mosley was booked
into jail on May 22, 2024.
Shawn Harris was booked into jail
on May 23, 2024.
Lee Roberts was booked into jail on
June 24, 2024.
Jason Boothe was booked into jail
on June 26, 2024.
Chad Kammerer was booked into
jail on July 5, 2024.
Stuart Wieland was booked into jail
on July 21, 2024.
William Vendenberg was booked
into jail on July 25, 2024.
Ryan Brown was booked into jail on
August 12, 2024.
James Chambers was booked into
jail on August 15, 2024.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
(as of August 21, 2024)
Jason Marnell was booked into jail
on February 23, 2024.
Julio Guzman was booked into jail
on May 21, 2024.
Dawson Paine was booked into jail
on June 3, 2024.
James Baber was booked into jail
on June 27, 2024.
Rhonda Nicandor was booked into
jail on July 22, 2024.
Amelia Murtagh was booked into
jail on July 22, 2024.
Sarah Crawford was booked into
jail on July 24, 2024.
Timothy Brown was booked into jail
on July 26, 2024.
Destiny Peters was booked into jail
on August 5, 2024.
Who knows?
We know. Buy a subscription, then YOULL know.
(785-448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-12-2024 / ANDERSON COUNTY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
Volunteer firefighter Patrick DuPont wades through suppressant foam on hay bales east of Scipio
Supper Club on 2350 Road last Thursday afternoon, after embers from an earlier brush fire were blown
over the stored hay bales igniting them. Firefighters from Greeley, Garnett, and Harris responded with
assistance from Emergency Management and EMS.
Patton named administrator for Saint
Lukes Kansas Hospitals in Garnett, Iola
Saint Lukes Health System
is pleased to announce that
William Pat Patton has been
named Administrator of Saint
Lukes two Kansas-based critical access hospitals. Patton will
lead and oversee day-to-day
operations at Anderson County
Hospital in Garnett, and Allen
County Regional Hospital in
Iola, spending time at both
locations. His first day is Sept.
9.
We are excited to have Pat
coming on board as the new
administrator for our Kansas
critical access hospitals, said
Darren Bass, Saint Lukes
North and Critical Access
Region CEO. He brings a
wealth of experience in leading
operations for multiple facilities, including an in-depth
understanding of and demonstrated success with critical
access hospitals.
Patton
most
recently
served as president of Valir
Rehabilitation Hospital, an
inpatient rehabilitation facility
in Oklahoma
C i t y ,
Oklahoma.
Past roles also
include CEO
of Patterson
Health Center
in
Harper
C o u n t y ,
Patton K a n s a s ,
which resulted from the
merger of two critical access
hospitals into a centrally located critical access hospital, and
as a market CEO for Kindred
Healthcare, a post-acute health
care services company.
"I'm impressed with the
staff's dedication not only to
their patients but to one another," said Patton. "The level
of engagement among board
members and their investment
in their community hospitals
is a bonus. I've been working in
health care in rural communities for over 20 years, and this
is right where I want to be."
Patton earned a bachelors
degree in healthcare administration from Wichita State
University and his Master of
Health Services Administration
from the University of Kansas.
He is a Fellow of the American
College
of
Healthcare
Executives and has lent his
expertise by serving on several
boards, including the Kansas
Healthcare
Collaborative,
Sunflower Health Network, and
Wheatland Health Network,
along with various committees
within the Kansas Hospital
Association.
Patton enjoys camping, hiking, and fishing in Colorado
in his free time. He is also an
avid photographer and looks
forward to exploring the local
trail system.
None of This Is True book discussion set
Book
Discussion
for
September is ready and available for pick up at the library.
Garnett Public Librarys book
discussion for Wednesday,
September 25th at 7pm, is
titled, None of This is True
by Lisa Jewell.
Celebrating her forty-fifth
birthday at her local pub, popular podcaster Alix Summer
crosses paths with an unassuming woman called Josie Fair.
Josie, it turns out, is also celebrating her forty-fifth birthday. They are, in fact, birthday
twins. A few days later, Alix
and Josie bump into each other
again, this time outside Alixs
childrens school. Josie has
been listening to Alixs podcasts and thinks she might be
an interesting subject for her
series. She is, she tells Alix,
on the cusp of great changes
in her life. Josies life appears
to be strange and complicated, and although Alix finds
her unsettling, she cant quite
resist the temptation to keep
making the podcast. Slowly she
starts to realize that Josie has
been hiding some very dark
secrets, and before she knows
it, Josie has inveigled her way
into Alixs lifeand into her
home. But, as quickly as she
arrived, Josie disappears. Only
then does Alix discover that
Josie has left a terrible and
terrifying legacy in her wake,
and that Alix has become the
subject of her own true crime
podcast, with her life and her
familys lives under mortal
threat. Who is Josie Fair? And
what has she done? (https://
www.simonandschuster.com/
books/None-of-This-Is-True/
Lisa-Jewell/9781982179007).
Discussion will be held
Wednesday, September 25th at
7 p.m. Books are available for
checkout at the library. Please
join us and connect through
books!
Dutch Country Cafe
Friday Night
Meals To Go
BBQ CHICKEN CHEESY POTATOES
BAKED BEANS DINNER ROLL COOKIE
&G o
b
a
r
G
On l y
No D i
ne-i n
(Plasticware & butter included)
While supplies last on these dates:
Sept. 6 and Sept. 13
$13
.99
no
(t a x
t in
Beginning at 4:30 p.m.
309 N. Maple Garnett dutchcountrycafe.com (785) 448-5711
cl .)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
EDDY
AUGUST 13, 1935 – SEPTEMBER 3, 2024
Virginia Ellen Morgan was
born August 13, 1935 in the
tiny border
town of West
Line,
MO,
the youngest of six
children of
James Leary
Morgan and
Julia Fischell
Morgan. A
Eddy
few
years
later the family moved back to Miami Co. KS
to her Fischell grandparents
farm, east of Paola. In the mid
1940s they moved into Paola.
Virginia graduated from Paola
High School in 1952 and on
Nov. 16, 1952 she was married
at the Methodist parsonage in
Paola to Gerald Arthur Ellis,
son of Loren Claude Ellis and
Esther Bratton Ellis. They
lived on Loren Elliss dairy
farm west of Paola and then
moved into Paola in 1957. In
1958 they built a new house
on Grandview Drive. Between
1953 and 1958 they had three
children, Michael, Susan and
Mark. In 1961 they moved to
Garnett, KS and established the
ANCO Cheese Co., the largest
cheese factory in Kansas, located at the corner of Park Rd.
and Hwy 59 on the north edge
of Garnett, producing cheese
for the Kraft company. In 1968
they built a large brick home
on Hwy 59 one mile north of
Garnett. About 1970 they built
an addition to the factory and
opened the Anco Cheese, Plate
& Stein shop which specialized
in imported gift items. During
the 1970s they acquired cheese
factories in Hoisington and
Mound Ridge KS. In the 1970s
they traveled to many classic
car shows and started a collection of classic cars. Jerry died
in 1980. Virginia then attended Allen County Community
Junior College in Iola and
Kansas University Medical
School in Kansas City, receiving a degree in Medical Records
Administration. She worked for
the Anderson County Hospital
in Garnett KS and for Ransom
Memorial Hospital in Ottawa
KS. In 1987 she was married
to William Eddy of Lawrence
KS. They built a home on a 15
acre lakeside property south
of Lawrence. Virginia became
a Kansas City Royals Lancer,
handling season ticket sales for
the Lawrence area for many
years. She and Bill traveled all
over the world, including many
trips with the Royals. She was
an avid bridge player and loved
flower gardening. Bill died in
2021. In 2023 Virginia moved to
Mesa, AZ. She passed away on
Sept. 3, 2024 in Mesa, AZ at the
age of 89.
Virginia is survived by
a brother, James L. Morgan
of Omaha NE, a sister-inlaw, LeAnne Shields of Paola
KS, her children Michael of
Phoenix AZ, Susan (Julie) of
Yachats OR, and Mark (Donna)
of Mesa AZ, grandson Grant
(Alexa) Ellis of Lawrence KS,
great-grandson Grady Ellis,
step-son Steve Eddy (Melissa)
of Prairie Village KS, and
step-grandchildren Jack and
Mary Beth Eddy.
In addition to husbands
Jerry and Bill, she was preceded in death by sisters Josephine
(Burton) Matthews of West Line
MO, Elnora (Lester) Vohs of
Block KS, Dorothy (Ray) Nolan
of Topeka KS, brother Jack
(Joan) Morgan of Wellsville
and Paola KS, step-daughter
Sharon Eddy of Shawnee KS,
and brother-in-law William C.
Ellis of Nixa MO.
The family is planning a
graveside service on Friday
Sept. 27th at 11am at the Paola
Cemetery in Paola KS.
Colony Christian Church has
first service in new building
Pastor Chase Riebel gave the
first sermon in the new church
building reminding the congregation to remember where we
came from but to keep in mind
that we have a new battleship
from which we can work, baptizing and making disciples.
Darren McGhee's communion meditation was "Intended
Uses." Men may have built
the foundation for the church
building but the true spiritual
foundation is Jesus Christ. The
building will be used to teach
children, to comfort the troubled and to take care of the less
fortunate.
Lexy Langworthy led worship
accompanied by Ethan and Ben
Prasko. Songs were "Sweet By
and By," "Goodness of God" and
"Graves into Gardens."
Piper Schmidt, daughter
of Nathan and Laura Schmidt,
was baptized at the new church
location followed by the baptism of Lilly Smart, daughter of
Dustin and Rochelle Smart, at
the previous church location.
KENT
Call The Review at (785) 448-3121.
Joleata Kent, age 66, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Monday,
September 9,
2024, at her
home.
Joleata
K
a
y
Thompson
was born on
June 28, 1958,
in Garnett,
Kent
Kansas, she
was the second of four children born to
Howard and Leila (Welsh)
Thompson. Joleata graduated from Crest High School at
Colony, Kansas in 1976. Joleata
was united in marriage to
Roger Kent on September 10,
1977, in Kincaid, Kansas. This
marriage was blessed with two
children, Jason and Johnna.
Joleata began working at the
Anderson County Hospital in
the business office, until having children. While the children were young she was able
to be home with them. She later
returned to work at H&R Block
in Garnett. Joleata earned her
bachelors degree from Ottawa
University in 1990 and then
obtained her CPA certification. She worked for Snodgrass
Dunlap and Company in Iola
for a number of years before
going to work at the Wolf
Creek Nuclear Operating
Corporation in the accounting
office. Joleata worked 21 years
at Wolf Creek, retiring in 2014.
Joleata took care of the business operations side of the family business, RJ Energy. In her
retirement years the business
was her full time focus.
In her free time Joleata
enjoyed many creative pursuits, over the years, she
enjoyed sewing, making her
daughters wedding dress, and
many clothes for her family.
In later years she took up rug
hooking and was active in her
group of friends. She was a
member of the Daughters of the
American Revolution (D.A.R.)
and currently served as the
secretary. Joleata was also a
member of the local quilt guild,
book club, and the Friends of
the Library. She also enjoyed
taking painting classes and
completing puzzles. Her family
could always look to Joleata for
any information on their genealogy. She attended the First
United Methodist Church in
Garnett and played in the bell
choir at church.
Joleata enjoyed family
get-togethers hosting many
Easter, Christmas and birthday
parties. She enjoyed all things
related to their grandchildren,
attending their activities and
sporting events. Traveling with
Joleata meant that every trip
included mandatory stops at
the historical sites.
She was preceded in death
by her parents, Howard and
Leila Thompson; and father-inlaw, George Kent.
Joleata is survived by her
husband, Roger Kent, of the
home; son, Jason Kent and
Christina Trujillo; daughter,
Johnna Brumley and Bruce;
five grandchildren, George,
Brooke, and Lilly Kent, Sammy
and Kent Brumley; two sisters and one brother, Chardel
Hastings and Mark, Rick
Thompson and Connie, and
Janell Yelm and Ron; mother-in-law, Bonnie Kent; many
nieces and nephews and other
family members.
Funeral services will be
held at 10:30 a.m. on Monday,
September 16, 2024, at the First
United Methodist Church
in Garnett, Kansas. Burial
will follow in the Springfield
Cemetery, Garnett. Joleatas
family will greet friends
from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. on
Sunday, September 15, 2024 at
the Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel in Garnett,
Kansas. Memorial contributions may be made to Friends of
the Library, D.A.R., or Kincaid
Fair Association. Condolences
may be sent to the family at
www.feuerbornfuneral.com
Washburn announces George
Kent graduated in summer 2024
TOPEKA
Washburn
University is pleased to
announce the students in its
summer 2024 graduating class.
These students completed their
courses for certificates, associate, bachelor's, master's and
doctorate degrees – more than
300 from Washburn University,
Washburn University School of
Law and Washburn Institute of
Technology.
George Kent from Garnett
graduated with a degree
in Stand Alone Parent
Program with an emphasis in
Phlebotomy.
These students were/are
given the opportunity to participate in either spring or fall
2024 commencement ceremonies.
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
29th Annual
POWER OF THE PAST
September 13-15 in Ottawa
2×2
Suttons
POWER
OF THE PAST!
213 S. Main Downtown Ottawa (785)242-3723
Enjoy the Power of the Past this weekend,
and2x3
remember us for your heating & cooling needs!
Adamson Bros
NOVEMBER 4, 1962 SEPTEMBER 6, 2024
Kenneth Petersilie, age 61, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Friday,
September 6,
2024, at the
Anderson
C o u n t y
Hospital.
He
was
born
on
November
4, 1962, in
Petersilie
T o p e k a ,
K a n s a s ,
the son of Arthur and Ethyl
(Rainbolt) Petersilie.
Kenneth was united in marriage to Karen Baker on August
1, 1981. They were blessed
with two children, Randy and
Stephany.
He was a farmer and enjoyed
being outdoors. Kenneth was
an avid hunter, fisherman,
trailrider and a great guy
all around. He never knew a
stranger, and always had a
big heart. Kenneth worked at
Anderson County Sales Co. for
21 years. He loved the auctions.
Kenneth was preceded in
death by his parents, Art and
Ethyl; his sister, Clydeen and
husband Charles and sister-inlaw, Barbara Lynch.
He is survived by his wife,
Karen Petersilie, of the home;
son, Randy Petersilie; daughter Stephany Millington and
husband Don; grandchildren,
Rose, Ruger, Lydia, Tracy; sister, Donna Simmons and husband Al, Janet Barber, Shirley
Mathes.
A memorial service will be
held at 10:00 A.M. on Friday,
September 13, 2024, at First
Christian Church, Garnett,
Kansas. Kenneths family will
greet friends on Thursday evening, September 12, 2024, from
5:00 to 7:00 P.M. at Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel,
Garnett, Kansas.
Memorial contributions may
be made to Anderson County
Hunter Education and can be
left in the care of the funeral
home.
Condolences may be sent to
the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com
God responds to the
hearts of the people
God responds to the hearts
of the people. In Genesis 6
we read, The LORD saw
how great mans wickedness
on the earth had become and
that every inclination of the
thoughts of his heart was only
evil all the time. The result
of this wickedness, the lack of
any inclination in the hearts
of the people toward God, was
God wiped mankind, whom he
had created, from the earth. In
Exodus 3 the LORD speaking
to Moses says, I have indeed
seen the misery of my people in
Egypt. I have heard them crying out because of their slave
drivers, and I am concerned
about their suffering. God
goes on to say, I have come
down to rescue them from the
hand of the Egyptians and to
bring them up out of that land
into a good and spacious land,
a land flowing with milk and
honey.
In the first instance we see
how God responds to the silence
of the people toward him.
You see no response toward
God is the same as a negative
response toward God from us.
If you sit in the church pew
and feel you have fulfilled your
required response toward God,
never moving forward toward a
deeper relationship with Jesus
Christ, never seeking forgive-
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
ness for your sins then be
advised the Bible says the full
weight of your total sins will
be on you alone. In Romans
3:23-24 Paul clearly points this
out to us when he says, for all
have sinned and fall short of
the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace through
the redemption that came by
Christ Jesus.
I believe we often set ourselves up as a judge of God. The
world has conditioned us to do
this, we judge other people all
the time. We have even been
conditioned to think of God
as being like ourselves and as
such we can pass judgement on
him. The people during Noahs
time received Gods justice.
The Hebrews when they left
Egypt received Gods mercy.
God responds to the heart of
his people with either justice
or mercy and it is all relative to
prayer.
Who knows?
We know. Buy a subscription,
then YOULL know.
(785-448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
3×5
Power of the Past
Antique Engine
& Tractor Show
Come explore your history at
PETERSILIE
JUNE 28, 1958 SEPTEMBER 9, 2024
Obituary Charges/Policy
Full obituaries are published as submitted in the Review at the rate
of 18 per word and include a photo at no charge. Death notices
are published free and include name, date of birth and death and
service information. A photo may be added to a death notice for a
$10 fee. Obituaries, jpeg photos and death notices may be emailed
to review@garnett-ks.com with a phone number for confirmation.
Payment may be arranged through your funeral home or directly
with The Review. We accept all major credit cards. Questions?
3
LOCAL
4
Awarded more than 60 times for excellence in news, opinion and advertsing by
newspaper professionals across the country but our highest honor is your readership.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
OPINION
Why does Kansas Farm Bureau want higher
production input costs for nations farmers?
The lobby organization that does the bidding
of Kansas Farm Bureau apparently believes high
fuel prices, high chemical and other profit killing farm input costs are good for KFB members
and for both producers and consumers in the
rest of the country in general. Why else would
it endorse Biden Administration vote-in-the-bag
Sharice Davids for another term in congress?
The basic economics of farming arent much
different than they are for any other business. If
costs of production exceed sales of product, you
lose. Someone needs to explain that to VOTE
FBF the political action committee of Kansas
Farm Bureau.
Imagine a local retailer who purchases inventory from a wholesaler then resells it from
his downtown business storefront. Different
profit models apply in different industries, but
a typical method or price setting is cost of the
product plus a multiplier to cover additional
non-inventory costs like payroll and taxes and
insurance and upkeep of facilities and equipment. Equipment wears out, so a prudent profit
model includes a percentage set aside to replace
that equipment when its no longer serviceable.
The whole idea is that business operators have
more costs than simply the obvious ones in
inventory and production, and if you dont cover
those costs over the long term, you go out of business. Literally hundreds of businesses outside
the farming industry fail every year in Kansas
because they dont accommodate these costs and
manage themselves accordingly. Staying in business, particularly in a rural state, is a tough job.
Farmers operate under a Catch 22 they
always have a market for their wares, but they
have little if any real control over their pricing.
Any farmer will tell you that hes felt the squeeze
in the last couple of years under the Biden economy which has been supported and exacerbated
at every turn by Sharice Davids near perfect voting record in support of Biden Administration
policy. If youve bought groceries or gasoline
or car insurance or virtually anything else anytime in the last three years, you know exactly
whats going on. Bidens awful, socialist-focused
monetary policy of printing borrowed dollars
and pumping trillions of them repeatedly into
the economy, long after the challenges caused
by government shutdown had passed, spawned
inflation and high prices not seen in a generation.
Flooding the economy with all that cash is
only part of the problem. Sharice Davids supported Biden in his quest to curtail petroleum
production in the U.S., causing the massive
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
spike in prices weve all been enduring since
2021. And that cost didnt just impact fuel; it
jacked up costs of anything containing petroleum fertilizers and weed suppressants and
insecticides; rubber for tires and hoses and
overall costs of shipping not to mention fuel that
powers tractors and the combines tilling soil and
harvesting crops.
Couple those price increases with the disastrous political climate which has been allowed
to fester under poor American leadership on the
world stage a war in Europe, another one in the
Middle East, OPEC oil production cuts and the
resulting fears of geopolitical risk among world
markets and the reduction in commodity prices weve seen obviously follows.
And with every bobble, dropped pass, lost
opportunity and incompetent judgment of the
Biden Administration, Sharice Davids has been
right there to vote in favor of it. Her voting
record is clear and recorded in black and white.
Somehow Kansas Farm Bureau PAC thought
this disastrous record and Davids enabling of it
justified a vote of confidence. Apparently even
with everything shes done to help put Kansas
farmers back into debt or out of business completely, KFB thought the time was right to go
hat in hand to her just because she holds a seat
on the House AG Committee, where a new U.S.
Farm Bill always seems to be under discussion
no matter when the last one was passed.
Although the majority of the vote in the Third
District Congressional race will come from the
population masses far removed from agriculture
in Johnson and Wyandotte County, farmers
across the Sunflower State should demand an
explanation of this move by the states leading
farm organization which is so counterproductive to their interests. ###
The Anderson County Reviews
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
There has been a big scandal with Amazon
Alexa political bias pushing the Harris campaign. But Microsoft Bing Copilot AI is also
brazenly providing the Harris campaign with
priceless in-kind contributions, bypassing the
federal elections commission. Try this yourself:
Ask Microsoft Copilot for the viewership of
Trumps RNC convention speech, and it will tell
you it cant answer political questions. Then
ask the exact same for viewership of Harriss
DNC convention speech, and it will answer with
celebratory detail and glee. You get the same disparity when asking for audiences of any Trump
versus Harris event. This needs to be publicized.
The fascist Democrat Party has a stranglehold
on the flow of information in this country, like
the totalitarians they are.
My daughter called and said in her apartment
complex in Dallas theyre having to staff 24-7
Actually ABC, abortion survivors are allowed to die… in Minnesota
ABCs debate moderators performance
in Tuesday nights presidential debate made
CNNs performance in June look like a master
class in fairness, objectivity, and balance.
It was exactly the kind of debate moderation left-wing commentators on X have been
demanding for monthsyears, really.
They dont want anything approaching objectivity. They wanted moderators to fact-check
former President Donald Trump every step of
the way while allowing his opponent to pontificate on questions they think will be beneficial to
Democratic Party fortunes.
And thats essentially what happened.
ABC News anchors David Muir and Linsey
Davis continually fact-checked Trump in
real time, arguing with him after nearly every
answer. That makes for a horrible debate format.
Were the Lincoln-Douglas debates factchecked by interjecting moderators? Of course
not. The debate was between the two men and
their ideas.
But in Tuesday nights debate, the moderators didnt even bother to create the mirage of
objectivity. They hounded Trump every step of
the way while stepping aside to allow Harris to
make her points. They werent fact-checking on
behalf of the American people, they were interjecting on behalf of their partisan interest.
The fact-checks werent even particularly
accurate, not that that really seemed to matter to
the moderators. For instance, when Trump said
that Democrats in some states support after-
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
JARRETT STEPMAN THE DAILY SIGNAL
birth abortion, Davis interjected that there is
no state in this country where it is legal to kill a
baby after birth.
As The Daily Signal has reported, there are
many statesincluding Minnesota, the home
state of Harris running mate Gov. Tim Walz
that allow babies who survive abortions to die.
Harris didnt get this treatment at all.
Moderators politely allowed Harris to say whatever she wanted.
Even in the most obvious case of Harris
going with the tired fabrication about Trump
calling white supremacists very fine people
in Charlottesville, Va.fact-checked as false by
even the reliably left-wing SnopesMuir and
Davis said nothing.
The fix was in.
To a certain extent, left-wing journalists
demanding this kind of rigging is understandable. They know that the ABCs and the CNNs
of the world are in the tank for their candidates. Why not use their power of control over
these debates to direct it in a way that benefits
Democrats, who are so clearly on the right side
of history?
That mentality won out on Tuesday night and
lefty commentators were giddy on social media.
I will say it ABC moderators have exceeded
expectations. They are fact-checking and confronting, Washington Post columnist Jennifer
Rubin posted on X. Shows how abysmal CNN
was.
That mirrors how the Left generally thinks
all our societys institutions should work.
Alternatives to the narratives the Left peddles
should be carefully managed and massaged so
the people are led to only one point of view.
Thats why the Left had a full-blown meltdown when entrepreneur Elon Musk bought
the social media platform formerly known as
Twitter. It meant that they would no longer have
the power to put the finger on the lever of amplifying the messages they like while suppressing
the ones they dont.
But this sort of bias comes at a cost.
Institutions that ply on their objectivity as their
main selling point risk surrendering the power
of that credibility when they blatantly put their
finger on the scale for a particular ideology.
SEE STEPMAN ON PAGE 7
The unmitigated, unanswered gall of Hamas killing Americans
Famously, a message from Theodore
Roosevelts secretary of state, John Hay, electrified the 1904 Republican convention: This
Government wants Perdicaris alive or Raisuli
dead.
Ion Perdicaris, a wealthy Greek-American,
had been kidnapped in Morocco by a bandit
named Ahmed al-Raisuni. Hays line served as
a U.S. ultimatum to bring the affair, after the
deployment of the U.S. Navy to Morocco and
drawn-out negotiations, to a conclusion.
Weve come a long way from the time when
the kidnapping of one American, whose citizenship was actually a little murky, elicited
a thunderous reaction as a matter of national
principle.
Needless to say, no one is ever going to mistake Joe Biden for TR, one of the most compelling figures in American history, but the president couldnt be a better representative of our
attenuated sense of national honor.
A terrorist group killed and kidnapped U.S.
citizens and is still holding them in horrific conditions, and the U.S. government has been doing
a tap dance between the terrorists and an Israeli
government fighting and bleeding to try to save
them.
U.S. officials condemn Hamas, yet there is
none of the righteous fury one would expect of a
government whose citizens have been subjected
to such grotesque mistreatment.
When Hamas murdered Hersh GoldbergPolin in cold blood, President Biden blamed
Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu for his
recalcitrance in negotiations even though
Hamas took the hostages, Hamas has refused to
release them, Hamas has a policy of killing them
if there is some chance they could get rescued,
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
and Hamas threatens to do the same again.
Weve imposed no significant consequences
on Iran for its sponsorship of a terror group with
American blood on its hands.
We are mealy-mouthed and skittish, a superpower constrained by its unwillingness to fully
take its own side in a fight.
We should feel a profound sense of national
embarrassment, but Joe Biden doesnt embarrass easily. He left U.S. citizens behind in
Afghanistan and has failed to neutralize a ragtag
band of rebels who continue to disrupt shipping
in the Red Sea despite the presence of the U.S.
Navy.
Back in 1904, when Perdicaris was released
and saw U.S. vessels in the water outside
Tangier, he exulted at such proof of his countrys solicitude for its citizens and for the honor
of its flag.
Biden is now falling short not just of the TR
standard, but that set by Lord Palmerston, the
great British foreign secretary, under much
less provocation. In 1850, Palmerston sent the
Royal Navy to vindicate the interests of David
Pacifico, a British citizen and Jew born in
Gibraltar, who was seeking recompense from
the Greek government for the destruction of his
property.
Responding to his critics, Palmerston delivered a nearly five-hour speech defining the question in the matter as, whether, as the Roman,
in days of old, held himself free from indignity,
when he could say Civis Romanus sum [I am
a Roman citizen]; so also a British subject, in
whatever land he may be, shall feel confident
that the watchful eye and the strong arm of
England, will protect him against injustice and
wrong.
Of course, the sentiments of Hay and
Palmerston are from long ago. It is likely that
Joe Biden and the people around him feel about
those attitudes the way John Kerry felt after
Vladimir Putin went into Ukraine the first
time in 2014: You just dont in the 21st century
behave in 19th-century fashion.
National honor, in any robust sense, presumably strikes them as atavistic and chauvinistic,
too simplistic and unyielding for the demands
of our complicated times. Hamas, though, isnt
playing by 21st-century rules. It is acting by the
same bloody-minded imperatives of barbarians
from any time or place. We may think we are
responding with great subtlety and sophistication, but we shouldnt be surprised if they consider us weaklings and fools.
Rich Lowry is editor of The National Review
security to keep the gangs out of the vacant
apartments in the complex. They break in
doors and come in and set up drug hubs and
brothels. She said what in the world is happening to this country. I said thats easy honey.
Democrats. Please people, pray for our country.
A stunning fact from the Inspector General of
the Department of Health and Human Services
concluded Kamala Harris has lost 325,000 children brought to this country under her leadership as, yes, the Biden-appointed Border Czar.
As if killing babies via late-term abortion isnt
heinous enough, the Democrats have no qualms
about voting child sex trafficking and labor
abuse. If this isnt sick, I dont know what it is.
I was driving down Maple today in Garnett and
I think it needs to be restated just how much
better the trek through town looks with those
two brand new buildings at the corner of Park
and 31 and the rebuilt restaurant, the tearing
down of that nasty old motel and all the work
the state finally did on that road to try to fix the
drainage. Just the appearance alone improves
the welcome look to outsiders a hundred percent. But it all goes away at the corner of Fourth
and Maple where the salvage yard is allowed to
continue operating. What a junk pile that place
is. All its missing is to line up gazing balls and
used car parts by the road to start selling them.
Good grief. Thank you.
Contact your elected leadership:
President Joseph Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(785) 296-3232
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Senator Roger Marshall
Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
3rd Dist. Congressman
Sharice Davids
1541 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2865
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
9th Dist. Rep
Fred Gardner
State Capitol Room512-N
Topeka, KS 66612
Office: (785) 296-7451
fred.gardner@house.ks.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
5
HISTORY
Coin shooting for the first time in
quite some time DIGGING UP THE PAST
SALE…
On August the 22nd I did
something I hadnt done in a
long time. I went coin shooting. Otherwise, I went metal
detecting for coins etc.
I finally got around to paying a visit to one of my favorite
parks. I went in the afternoon
and it was quite hot, so I only
spent 1 1/2 hours searching for
those lost coins. As you can see
I found 8 quarters and 2 dimes.
($2.20). Of course all of them
were modern and mostly of the
State series.
Im trying to figure out why
so many quarters are lost. Of
course these days you cant buy
anything for a penny, nickel or
dime. Back when I was young
for a quarter, I could go to a
movie for $.14, get a bag of popcorn for $.10 and have a penny
$28,630.46 of that gross sales of
$56,920.
The countys August publication of total tax delinquencies typically totals between
$300,000 and $400,000, including
recent delinquencies and lagging ones from several years
back.
County counselor James
Campbell said even the initial
talk of upcoming tax sales are
good to spur tardy collections.
He said initial press accounts
generate about 10 percent
collections on average of any
batch of prospective foreclosures, and the notice period
prior to foreclosure generates
additional funds prior to the
actual sale.
FROM PAGE 1
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
left for bubble gum. I sure wish
Id kept those baseball player cards that came with the
bubble gum. I had Babe Ruth,
Mickey Mantle, etc. etc.
Ill sure be glad to get back
to my farm site, but for now
its just too dry and hard to
do any excavation. For now I
guess Ill just have to be satisfied doing a little more coin
shooting.
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers 1Sept2024
SHOW…
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-12-2024 / ARCHIVE
FROM PAGE 1
hook. For more information,
please visit @andersoncountyflywheelers on Facebook, contact the Garnett Area Chamber
of Commerce, 785-448-6767, or
Scott Garrett, Flywheelers
President, 785-893-0004.
For persons wanting to volunteer and help, the Anderson
County Flywheelers will be
hosting meetings on September
16 and September 30 at El
Jimador Mexican Restaurant
beginning at 6:30 p.m. to finalinternet portion of the course ize this years event.
before attending the field day.
Students must be 11 to
become certified. It will cost
$15 per student to offset facility
fees. Students must pre-register to attend. Class sizes are
limited. Contact Rockers (785)
835-6580.
Circa September 2000 – The Crest Lancers volleyball team – Front row, from left: Grace Kim, Nichole
Stahl, Mika Westerman, Kristie Stiffler. Second row: Crystal Jackman, Kerry Stewart, Erin Thompson,
Megan Preston, Allison Wools, Marla Bain. Back row: Nicki Cox, Casey Greenwood, Jamie Ellington,
Kristina Nilges, Megan Greenwood, Emily Adams.
2024 Kansas Hunter Education
classes October 5th & 6th in Garnett
There will be 2 seperate
classes offered for the 2024
Kansas Hunter Education
classes that will be taking place
on October 5th and 6th at the
Optimist Youth Building located at 1700 North Lake Road in
Garnett.
One class is the traditional
class, which is a 2 day course.
The first day will be Saturday,
2×4 kpa morton
October 5th from 8:30 a.m. – 5
p.m. It will consist of classroom
instruction and the students
will be required to bring their
own lunch. On Sunday, October
6th, the class will be from 12:30
p.m. – 5 p.m. and will include
field day exercises.
The second class offered is a
1 day course from 8:30 a.m. – 5:00
p.m. Students must compete an
YOU
SAW
THIS.
So did your customers.
Call (785) 448-3121 to advertise.
Full-time Police Officer Wanted in Sabetha, Kansas
The Sabetha Police Department is accepting applications for a full
time Police Officer. Applicants must be willing to do shift work, be
on call when needed, and be able to meet the living requirements the
city requires. Pay is competitive and based on experience. We also
offer Health Insurance, KPERS Retirement, Sick and Vacation Leave,
and other optional coverages. Minimum Qualifications are: must be a
United States citizen, must be 21 years of age, must possess a high
school diploma or GED, must possess a valid drivers license, must
reside in Kansas, cannot have a felony on your record, be able to pass
both a mental and physical exam. For questions and information on
how to apply, contact the police department at (785) 284-2158.
OPEN
FOR
BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
Matters
Just 8 bucks a
block per week to
list your
business here!
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
Hecks Moving Service
Millers
Fencing
& Welding
Specializing in
barbed wire
fence
& corrals
Aaron Miller
(785) 433-3878
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Howard Yoder
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 489-2212
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Inspected Facility
Ashton Heck
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
(785) 204-0369
Prairie Lane
Painting
Residential
interior & exterior
PRINTING
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
review@garnett-ks.com
Locally owned.
(785) 591-0840
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
1-800-823-8609
Post Frame Construction
Residential Slab Homes
www.yutzyconstruction.com
Service Sales Installation Repairs
Garage Doors & Openers
242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
6
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
community
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
CALENDAR
Thursday, September 12, 2024
8:00 a.m. – Morning Mingle
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
6:00 p.m. – Concert in the Park at
Donna Harris Park downtown
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44 Meeting
Friday, September 13, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
4:00 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board
Meeting
Saturday, September 14, 2024
Citywide Garage Sales
10:00 a.m. – Womens Resource
Fair at Garnett Rec Center
Sunday, September 15, 2024
9:00 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
Monday, September 16, 2024
8:00 a.m. – Movement Mondays Fitness Court
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Hot Yoga with Jenelle
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:00 p.m. – Anderson County
Economic Development Meeting
5:30 p.m. – BPW Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – Planning Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committee
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
Board Meeting
Thursday, September 19, 2024
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, September 20, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Monday, September 23, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Hot Yoga with Jenelle
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, September 26, 2024
2:00 p.m. – Emergency Food
Assistance Program (Harvesters)
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, September 27, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Monday, September 30, 2024
8:00 a.m. – Movement Mondays Fitness Court
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / JESSIE DUNCAN
Beau Wurtz serving up some BBQ to some customers at Greeley Smokeoff last Saturday. Along with
Vinnie Trabucco and Drous Alton (behind Beau), they call themselves Brother-in-law BBQ.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / JESSIE DUNCAN
Collin Wille and John Booth raising money for the Elks Lodge
569 in Iola with All Fired Up.
NAMES…
FROM PAGE 1
The Reviews attorney Max
Kautsch, who also serves as
the Kansas Press Associations
legal counsel on government
transparency issues, said the
issue illuminated the grassroots importance of open
records laws and the importance for government officials
at every level to be familiar
with records they maintain
which are actually owned by
and subject to review by the
public.
Frontier District Director
Rebecca McFarland refused
to provide the records first
under limited exemptions to
the states open record law. It
(the exemption) is applicable
only if information in a record
meets the definition of clearly
unwarranted invasion of privacy found in K.S.A. 45-217(d),
which means revealing information that would be both
highly offensive to a reasonable person and not of legitimate concern to the public,
Kautsch wrote in a letter to
McFarland.
Simply put, last names do
not qualify as information
highly offensive to a reasonable
person. The law was designed
to protect information like
social security numbers and
birthdates, the disclosure of
STEPMAN…
FROM PAGE 4
The publics attitude toward
ABC and their cohorts and
the media has followed the
same course as public health
institutions in the wake of the
COVID-19 lockdowns. When
after months of telling everyone to lock down for everyone
elses safety, they largely came
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
FAMILY-STYLE!
Every Sunday
Friday: Chicken fried steak
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
or chicken fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
Homemade
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
PAN-FRIED
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
CHICKEN
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
2×3
1-Stop
We have
pizza!
Sunday: Homemade
pan-fried chicken w/sides
which would most certainly be
highly offensive. The same
cannot be said for information
that could be found in a phonebook, he said.
Moreover, Kautsch wrote,
as the District recognized for
decades, and as other Extension
Offices still understand, disclosure of the full names is a matter of public concern in a community where the county fair
is so important to so many. The
District cannot show that disclosing the last names is not of
legitimate concern to the public.
A summary of the federal law, the Childrens Online
Privacy Protection Act under
the administration of the
Federal Trade Commission,
defines it as imposing certain
requirements on operators of
websites or online services
directed to children under 13
years of age, and on operators
of other websites or online services that have actual knowledge that they are collecting
personal information online
from a child under 13 years
of age. Neither the Review
nor the Frontier Extension
District fit those qualifiers,
Kautsch said. Legal counsel for
the Extension District said the
district was simply trying to
protect children.
Our clients main concern
throughout this discussion
has been the safety of the children who participate, wrote
Blaine Finch, lawyer for the
district, in reply. We believe
your client shares these concerns as well, so we would urge
caution as to the use of these
minors personal information
within the commercial enterprise operated by your client
both in print and in the online
platforms without first gaining
consent from the guardians of
these minors.
Anderson County Review
publisher Dane Hicks said the
extension districts denial of
the information delayed the
publication of the newspapers
Winners Circle results tabloid from the Anderson County
Fair by three weeks. The section was published and is distributed today in this edition of
the Review.
What we were asking for
is the same information weve
been publishing to recognize
those kids for their 4H projects
since the early 1900s, Review
Publisher Dane Hicks said.
Its this abundance of caution
nonsense government used
to close everything down and
clamp everything shut during
out in favor of Black Lives
Matter protests because racism is the real pandemic, they
lost an enormous number of
American who will never trust
them again.
ABCs moderators performance Tuesday night is a perfect example of why we have
populism.
Did Trump fall into the traps
ABC and the Harris campaign
set in this 3-on-1 debate? Yes,
probably. They will now pat
themselves on the back and
think of it as a job well done
until Election Day.
With some Americans,
thats all good and well. Trump
is too dangerous to be given a
fair shake. With a fair debate,
the people may choose poorly.
But the stacked deck highlighted the theme that Trump
has always used to great success with his supporters since
he became the Republican presidential nominee the first time
way back in 2015. The system is
rigged against you. The system
hates Trump because it hates
his supporters.
That message was driven home on Tuesday night.
Maybe this was mission accomplished for ABC, but Muir and
Davis did a disservice to the
American people and certainly
discredited themselves.
Covid, and now its their kneejerk reaction to everyting,
Hicks said. These bureaucrats
have to be reminded from time
to time that the law is the law,
Annual
2×4
AD
St. Johns Church Greeley, Kansas
September 22, 2024
Serving from 10 a.m.- 1:30 p.m.
(Dine in & takeout)
Adults $15 Children $6 Takeout $15
Turkey & Dressing Chicken & Noodles Ham
Mashed Potatoes & Gravy Green Beans
Apple Salad Cranberries Sauerkraut
Homemade Bread & Pies Tea/Coffee/Water
EVERYONE WELCOME!
RAFFLES COUNTRY STORE BAKE SALE
St. Johns Parish Hall is handicap accessible
2×4 kpa qsi
Jarrett Stepman is editor of
The Daily Signal. See more at
www.dailysignal.com
Ottawa, Kansas
W E R E R E A DY TO S E RV E YO U I N
4×5 Ottawa Guide
,Ottawa
ANDERSON COUNTYS ONLY
LOCALLY-OWNED NEWSPAPERS
785-448-3121 / FAX 785-448-6253
2×3
Agency West
Courtney Tucker, Agent
courtney.tucker@agencywestins.com
Auto Health Business & Commercial
Work Comp Bonding Homeowners Life
Recrecreational Vehicle Farm
415 S. Oak St. Garnett (785) 448-2284
not a suggestion they can take
or leave at their fancy.
McFarland did not respond
to an email seeking comment
for this story Wednesday.
email: review@garnett-ks.com
402 N. Main 785-242-8916
Jeff & Lou Baker – Owners
1-800 -CARSTAR – 24/7 Accident Assistance.
Relax, well take it from here.
PAINT WALLPAPER
CUSTOM WINDOW BLINDS
CUSTOM FRAMING & SUPPLIES
109 S. Main
Ottawa, KS
Bruce & Joyce Beatty cornerstonebook@sbcglobal.net
East side of historic
downtown OTTAWA
785-242-3723
701 S. Poplar
Ottawa
785-242-6655
FRAMES & DECOR
202 S. Main, Ottawa 785-242-2112
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
Fine Senior Living.
OTTAWA PAINT
Contact Heidi at
785-242-5007
Suttons Jewelry
Property managed by
Kay Management Company.
Day, Night, Weekend, Online
Visit www.neosho.edu
Country Favorites
Listen to
Anderson
County Today!
Mon-Fri:
8:00am
8
FALL SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
Anderson County High School Central Heights High School Crest High School
2024 FALL SPORTS
ACHS football still in search of their first winning season since 2009
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT In 2023, another
sub .500 season marked the
14th consecutive year of the
Anderson County Bulldogs
finishing without a winning
record.
It will be the fourth season
for the Bulldogs football team
under the coaching of Luke
Catloth. So far they have had
minimal success during his tenure.
Catloth finished his first
year with a 2-7 record, was 3-6
in his 2nd year and regressed to
2-7 again last season.
Their only regular season win last year was against
Osawatomie before closing out
the season with a win against
Galena in a consolation game
which pits them against another team that didnt make the
postseason to conclude their
schedule.
Offense was hard to come
by last year for the Bulldogs as
they were limited to 20 points
or less in 6 of their 7 losses.
2024 Anderson County High School football – Front
row, from left: Trowtt Webber, Christopher Barnett,
Xavier Carver, Andrew King, Andrew Kiatoukaysy,
Josh Hansen, Landon Schillig, Owen Thompson, Aleck
Smith, Zach Schaffer, Aidan Steele, Christian Barnett,
Albert Thacker, Rigin Jasper, Brayden Mudd, Paxton
The team wasnt without
some standout performers
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / ROCKERS PHOTOGRAPHY
Foltz, Adam Kiatoukaysy. Middle row: Truett Vermillion,
Miles Poe, Owen Rockers, Huck Young, Lucas Mills,
Kemper Hollon, Gunner Mead, Colton Dilley, Brody
Kohlmeier, Donavan Zimbelman, Caiden Fisher, Cowen
Wittman, Aiden Perez, Gus Carver, Beau Howey,
Wyatt Whitham, Coleson Foltz, Tateum Stevens. Back
though last year.
Porter Foltz earned All-
Pioneer League as a linebacker
and also earned second team
row: Natalee Ruppel, Coach Jeff Cover, Coach Jake
Smith, Coach Mike Kellerman, Camryn Wilson, Quinton
King, Garrett Tucker, Chase Crane, Luke Stephenson,
Deigo Garcia-Campoy, Carson Kuhlman, Coach Ethan
Schillig, Coach Matt Stevenson, Coach Luke Catloth.
as an offensive lineman along
with Noah Wheeler. They were
joined on the all-league team by
AJ Schaffer as a defensive back.
Lady Bulldog volleyball
retooling following a
successful 2023 campaign
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Tarrie Miller led
the Anderson County Bulldogs
to a solid 26-11 record in her
third season at the helm,
including finishing 1st in the
Pioneer League.
It will be tough to duplicate
that success with 7 departing
seniors and a schedule that
includes many 5A and 6A
schools and no returning varsity seniors, so the odds will be
stacked against them.
The seven seniors they
are trying to replace are
Brenna Kohlmeier, Brooke
Galey, Rilyn Sommer, Eva
Bures, Caitlyn Foltz, Aubrey
Thompson and Kailyn Honn.
Trying to lead the rebuilding
year will be returning varsity
players Rose Katzer, Jordan
Miller and Brylie Kholmeier.
They are all juniors.
It is a fairly young varsity
roster overall as the Bulldogs
have 2 seniors, 4 juniors, 3
sophomores and a freshman.
Proud to support our area youth
2×2.5
and their accomplishments!
Tom Adams
We appreciate your
hard work and commitment.
Tom Adams Construction
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / ROCKERS PHOTOGRAPHY
2024 Anderson County High School volleyball. Front row, from left: Addalyn Kueser, Jordan Miller, Addyson Ladewig, Brooke Hughes,
Brylie Kohlmeier, Rose Katzer. Back row, from left: Manager Paige Nicholls, Head Coach Tarrie Miller, Maggie Self, Sylvan Troyer,
Brooklyn Kellerman, Aspyn Richardson.
(785) 448-3997
Residential Commercial Municipal
Thank goodness she didnt
2×2.5
play
softball like I did.
GPI
Hillary Clinton
2×2.5
anco abstract
Proud to support all
2×2.5
area student athletes!
ryans pest
RYANS PEST CONTROL
Ryan Walter
Your locally owned title company
Owner
785-448-4323
Good Luck to all our area teams!
236 N. Spruce, Garnett
Buying or selling?
Call us today.
2×2.5
Everything we
Goldturns
Key to…
touch
Best
2×2.5 of luck to all
EKAE
our area teams!
Sold!
LAKE OZARK, MO.
GARNETT
GARDNER
PRINCETON
OTTAWA
1196 HORSESHOE
113 S. Maple
1506 S. MAIN BEND PARKWAY
104 E. Main
1508 Hwy. 59
(785) 448-5138 (913) 856-8809 (785) 937-2260 (785) 521-3991 (417) 943-2265
Good
2×2.5 Luck Teams!
Stop by before or after the games.
Tradewinds
110 W. 5th Ave.
Garnett
785-448-5856
Proudly Supporting
2×2.5
Our
Area Youth Athletes
Wittman
and All Their
Achievements!
Carla Walter
(785) 448-7658
2×2.5
BUY 3, GET 1
Gold Key
Best of
luck teams!
FREE
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
Wittman Auto Parts
138 E. 6th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-6611
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
Bulldog cross country looking to rebuild roster
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Make no mistake
about it, the Anderson County
Bulldog cross country program
has struggled in recent years
to live up to their incredible
reputation of the past couple of
decades.
Within the last decade, the
girls program was once shooting for their 10th straight
league title. The boys teams
were often at or near the top of
the league year in and year out
as well.
The lack of participants is
making it difficult to regain
those lofty expectations.
This year, we are at a point
where our rebuilding efforts
are trying to find their footing,
long time head Coach Mike
Sibley stated.
Sibley will be leading the
cross country program for his
20th year this season.
We are expecting to have
the lowest numbers we have
had in the past 20 years of my
tenure, Sibley added.
Not without effort to recruit
new runners, Coach Sibley has
struggled to build on the core
of runners that the team had
last year.
Despite the low numbers,
the team isnt without a solid
core of runners.
The team is very excited to bring back 3 talented
varsity runners in senior
Brodie Wiesner, senior Brody
Barnes and sophomore Grant
Nienstedt.
Wiesner was 1st team allleague last year and both
Barnes and Nienstedt were 2nd
team all-league in the Pioneer
League.
His trio has the potential
to lead the team towards
a run at the Pioneer League
Championship.
This will take some other
runners stepping up for this to
happen.
Sibley stated, To do so, they
will need to help inspire returning senior Zykin Velvick, and
sophomore athletes Wesley
Mills and Owen Hawkins to
pack up with them and run as
a team.
On the Girls side, returning
letter winner Hope Hill will be
the only female runner at the
first meet. Coach Sibley hopes
to get Emma Bauman, who
was a letter winner last year,
healthy and see some newcomers including Rayna Kuhlman
and Adriann Fennama come
along as the season progresses.
Losing Landon Kraft and
Addie Fudge to graduation will
hurt not only in performance
but leadership as well as they
both were 4-time all league
runners.
Sibley concluded, As our
recruiting efforts continue, we
hope to inspire other athletes
to join the team and build on
the success that we have had
over the past 55 seasons.
9
FALL SPORTS
Good Luck
Teams!
2×2.5
Yutzy
Great entertainment,
great support for our local
athletes… attend a local
athletic event this week! 1-800-823-8609
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / ROCKERS PHOTOGRAPHY
2024 Anderson County High School boys cross country.
Front row, from left: Bo Johnston (manager), Wesley Mills, Grant
Nienstedt, Owen Hawkins. Back: Coach Everett Cox, Zykin Velvick,
Brodie Wiesner, Brody Barnes, Coach Sibley.
Come see whats new and different at
2×2.5
josephines
Proudly supporting our
student athletes.
421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues. – Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2
785-448-3038
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / ROCKERS PHOTOGRAPHY
2024 Anderson County High School girls cross country. From left:
Coach Cox, MGR Johnston, Emma Baughman, Adriann Fennama,
Rayna Kuhlman, Hope Hill, Coach Sibley.
2×2.5
bank greeley
AC girls golf team is inexperienced but driven
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Despite only one
returning letter winner and
an young team, Head Coach
Nicole Wiehl is looking forward to coaching her squad as
she enters her 16th season.
The only returning letterman is sophomore Rylee Hill.
Coach Wiehl expects Hill to
lead on the course as well as
off.
I know Rylee is capable of
improving her game as well as
helping her teammates have a
fun and successful year.
Newcomer Jadyn Parks has
caught the eye of Wiehl early
in this young season.
Although a freshman, I
really think Jadyn will help
this young team with our overall score, Wiehl said. She has
a natural swing and already
knows a lot about golf since
playing in junior high under
the coaching of Marty Alley.
Last year the Lady Bulldogs
finished first in the Pioneer
League and 3rd at the Basehor
Invitational behind graduated
players Reagan Witherspoon
and Lexi Overstreet.
Witherspoon qualified for
the state tournament as an
individual, which is very tough
to do.
Coach Wiehl said of
Witherspoon, She was a very
consistent player that will be
missed tremendously.
Wiehl added, Lexi will not
only be missed for her golf
experience but her team camaraderie.
Overstreet
is
playing
golf this year at Coffeyville
Community College.
Also new to the team this
year are senior Ruth Burkdoll
and Vicky Vega, sophomores
Anna Danner, Rylee Hill,
Coming through Parker?
Call ahead for a pizza
or stop by on your way home
after the game!
(913) 898-6211
Best of luck teams!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / ROCKERS PHOTOGRAPHY
2024 Anderson County High School girls golf. From left: Coach Wiehl, Marlee Hollon, Jaelyn Leyser,
Emily Sobba, Ruth Burkdoll, Vicky Vega, Anna Danner, Manager Everlee Crum, and Jadyn Parks.
Marlee Hollon and Emily
Sobba as well as freshman
Jaelyn Leyser.
Coach just thinks early in
the season her young team just
needs to focus on their fundamentals. Ball striking and
consistency need to improve so
that the team can compete in
the future.
We have a very young team
with little tournament experience, Wiehl stated. First we
just need to get comfortable
playing in a tournament setting.
The goals of the team have
been tempered slightly as the
ultimate goal is a state appearance but Coach Wiehl has a
more realistic initial goal.
I would like to see over half
the team take 7-10 strokes off
their starting scores. They just
need to keep going because the
next shot is the most important
Proud to support
2×2.5
our area
6th Ave
students and athletes!
6th Ave Boutique & Western Wear
and good golf doesnt just happen overnight, Wiehl said.
Despite the inexperience,
Coach Wiehl is very enthusiastic with the group she has.
They are a competitive bunch
that is willing to put in the
extra work to improve their
game.
Wiehl concluded, Its very
exciting as a coach to watch
young people take an initiative and improve their game on
their own time.
Congratulations
2×2.5
to all players, coaches & families!
psi
FARM Insurance
PSI CROP
Moran, KS
(620) 237-4631
Loren
LorenKorte
Korte
Rosan Williams
Iola, KS
(620) 365-6908
2×2.5
wolken tire
The Best Tire Service Center
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-2276
We proudly support
our area student athletes!
2×2.5
state farm
Proudly supporting the future of
our
communities – our area youth!
2×2.5
farm bureau
Way 2 Go Teams, You Rock!
2×2.5 Supporting Our Area Youth!
qsi
800-374-6988
Specializing in Complete
Post Frame Buildings
Richmond, Kansas
www.qualitystructures.com
Proud
pizza
hutto Support
our Student Athletes!
405 N. Maple
Garnett
785-448-3465
pizzahut.com
Delivery
Dine in, Carryout
Delivery or&Carryout!
Thank you for your hard work
and dedication in representing our
schools & communities.
Scipio Supper Club
Amanda Jones
Agent
213 S. Maple Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6125
Wed & Sun nights 6-9
Fri & Sat nights 6-10
32465 NE Neosho Rd Garnett (785) 835-6246
10
FALL SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
2×2.5
wilson chiropra
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / KEVIN GAINES
Front row, from left: Denton Ramsey, Gunner Ellington, Elijah Taylor,
Teagen Allen, Kade Nilges, Gentry McGhee. Second row: Koiy
Miller, Eill Disbrow, Xander Fuller, Max Disbrow, Kole Walter, Trewit
Luedke, Charlie Slyter, Daylan Nicholas. Back row: Jensen Barker,
Henry White, Lane Yocham, Wyatt Robb, Drake Weir, Roy Gordon,
Tristan Boone, Dalton Kersley.
Lancers football expecting growth after rebuild year
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY Last season was
a rebuilding year as they had
their first losing season following a run of four straight winning seasons.
After having to replace all
their starters from the previous season. Despite that, the
Lancers began the season 3-1,
but lost four of their last five
games to finish 4-5.
Key losses to last years
team are Ryan Golden, Logan
Kistner and Jerry Rodriguez.
Golden led the defense with
4 interceptions. Rodriguez was
second on the team with 227
yards receiving and 4 touchdowns and Kistner was second
on the team with 53 tackles on
the year.
The top returners are Jensen
Barker, Kade Nilges, Gentry
McGhee, Denton Ramsey and
Drake Weir.
It was a difficult year having
to run out new starters at every
position on both sides of the
ball but the Lancers adjusted
pretty well.
Last year was a growth
year, fifth year head coach
Nick McAnulty stated.
McAnulty added, We went
through some growing pains
along the way, but we saw
improvements and I was happy
with the growth we showed.
This year the Lancers will
be returning half their starters
and are adding some experience with the return of Henry
White who missed 6 games to
injury a year ago.
Coach McAnulty concluded,
We should be a more mature
and disciplined team this
year.
2×2.5
brummel
Proudly supporting
our area sports teams!
Garnett (785) 448- 3161
2×2.5
farmers
bank
state
www.fsbkansas.com
We are Proud to Support
our area youth athletes
2×2.5
and all their achievements.
ValleyR
valleyragriservice.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / KEVIN GAINES
2024 Crest High School Volleyball – Front row, from left: Jaycee
Schmidt, Summer Valentine, Gracyn Ellington, Kamryn Jones,
Gracie Brewer, Madi Moyer. Back row: Coach Walter, Kinley
Edgerton, Kaelin Nilges, ALlison Weatherman, Karlee Boots,
Cursten Allen, Aylee Beckmon, Hanna Schmidt, Coach Crow.
After a record breaking year, Crest volleyball has a new coach
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY It isnt easy on a
new head coach trying to instill
their nuances and expectations
that may be different from the
previous coach, but first year
Coach Carlyn Crow of the Crest
Lancers volleyball team has
extra pressure as she is following up back-to-back recording
breaking winning seasons for
the team.
During the 2022 season, the
Lancers set a team record with
wins going 26-8 only to be oneupped by the 2023 team as they
finished the year as sub-state
runner-ups with a 28-8 record
for the year.
Despite being her first season at the helm, Coach Crow
knows exactly what she is getting into as she has coached the
junior high squad last year so
witnessed it firsthand.
Gone from last years team
are Kayla Hermreck and
Brooklyn Jones. Hermreck was
First team All-League in the
Three Rivers Conference and
was on the second team AllState team.
Leading the way for the
Lancers will be seniors Karlee
Boots, 2nd team all-league last
year, and Cursten Allen. They
will be joined by juniors Kinley
Edgerton and Kaelin Nilges.
Last years team came close
to qualifying for the state tournament, which is what they
have their sights set on this
year their coach said.
This year we have a strong
group of individuals with varsity experience under their
belt. We have a large junior
class and many of them play
club volleyball together outside
of
the school season, Coach Crow
stated. This group is a hardworking group and because
theyve all played together on
varsity for multiple years, they
have the chemistry that you
need to be successful in this
sport.
Lancer runners have high hopes heading into the season
BY KEVIN GAINES
BEST OF LUCK
to all our area sports teams!
Courtney Tucker, Agent
415 SOUTH OAK. GARNETT (785) 448-2284
2×2.5
solander
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY Its not often that
the core of a team that has
finished in the top 3 state the
last 2 seasons returns, but that
is exactly the case for the Crest
Lady Lancers cross country
team.
Not only are they all returning, they are all just juniors
this year as the run started
with their freshmen campaign.
In 2022 the Lancers finished
3rd in State and in 2023 they
finished in 2nd place.
As a freshman, Josie Walter
finished in 3rd, followed by
Peyton Schmidt in 14th and
Aubrey Allen was 24th.
As sophomores, the trio
duplicated their success as
Walter finished in 5th, Schmidt
in 10th and Allen crossed in
31st place.
The fourth runner last year
was Kaylee Allen, but she was
a senior so the Lancers need
someone else to step up so
the Lancers can compete as a
team.
The addition Kallei Robb, a
freshman, is that fourth runner.
I am looking forward to
see what she can do for us
this year, head coach Kaitlyn
Cumming said.
She added, Kallei has been
working hard all summer putting in the miles.
Coach Cummings said her
We are proud to support
2×2.5
our area athletics!
benjamin realty
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-2024 / KEVIN GAINES
2024 Crest High School and Middle School cross country. Front row, from left: Isaac Francis,
Bailey Boone, Lynnex Allen, Aidynn Edgerton, Klaire Nilges, Lukas Taylor, Piper Schmidt, Jorden
Allen, and Wyatt Francis. Back row: Kallei Robb, Peyton Schmidt, Grady Allen, Elijah Taylor, Gunner
Ellington, Ryan West, Josie Walter, Coach Cummings, and Aubrey Allen. Not pictured: Jimmy Ayers.
girls work together very well
and have been together since
middle school, helping with
the team dynamic.
Individually they are
very determined to do their
best and work hard, Coach
Cummings added.
The 6th year coach is not
only looking forward at the
chance to coach the girls, but
is excited to have enough boys
this year to compete as a team
as well.
For the first time in my six
years I have a full boys team,
Cummings stated.
I am beyond excited for
this, she added. We have
three returning seniors, adding two Freshman Grady Allen
and Jimmy Ayers. These boys
are just as excited as I am. We
are ready to see some competi-
tion and see how our work we
have put in pay off.
The three returning boys
are seniors Gunner Ellington,
Elijah Taylor and Ryan West.
Cummings concluded, We
are a close knit group that
works as a team. It is a bonus
to have parents and a community who support our team
endlessly.
201 N. Maple Garnett
O(785) 448-2550H(785) 241-0532C(785) 304-2029
benjaminrealty@earthlink.net
Proudly Supporting our
2×2.5
Youth & Local Athletics!
Barnes Seed
Keegan Barnes
25624 NE 2180 Rd.
Garnett, KS 66032 785-304-2500
keegan.barnes@plantpioneer.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
FALL SPORTS
Central Heights Vikings cross country loaded with talent and experience
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND Last year was just
another season of success for the
Central Heights Vikings cross
country program under 9th year
head coach Troy Prosser.
The boys won the regional
championship and placed fourth
in State at the 2A State meet.
Each of the boys and girls squads
had a pair of finishers in the top
20 in the state competition.
Three players graduated
from last seasons team. They
are Nicholas Schultze, Lillie
Johnson and Alexis Davis.
Returning letterwinners from
last years girls team are Emma
Cubit, Melaney Chrisjohn, Sky
Fritchman and Arabella Dunbar.
Cubit finished 6th at State and
Chrisjohn finished just outside
the top 10 in 11th place.
Boy returning letter-winners are Alex Skeet, Connor
Burkdoll, Cody Hammond,
Christian McCord, Owen Miller,
Aydan Dunbar, Aidan Howland
and Brylan Sommer.
Hammond and Burkdoll finished 7th and 17th respectively
at State.
Expectations are high again
for the 2023 team. Obviously
Coach Prosser wants his athletes to finish at the top but the
results come when the preparation is done correctly.
Stay healthy, being great
teammates, representing the
school with class and good
sportsmanship and improving
are always top priority, Prosser
stated. Wins and losses are
almost always a result of preparation and focus.
This years team is loaded
with experienced runners who
look to win as individuals and
teams.
Its not always easy in the
Flint Hills League though which
has some stellar programs in
divisions 1A, 2A and 3A. There
is no lack of challenge at any
level, Prosser added.
To accomplish those goals,
the teams will rely on their experience and work ethic.
Coach Prosser understands
with success comes pressure,
From time to time some of
the athletes will put too much
pressure on themselves, said
Prosser.
Every single kid in the program is important. They all
bring something to the table
that the team needs and can
learn from each other on a daily
basis, concluded Prosser.
11
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-24 / SUBMITTED
2024 Central Heights High School & Middle School Cross
Country. Front row, from left: Kamden Moon, Arabella Dunbar,
Rilya Lickteig, Elizabeth Meyer, Ella Johnson, Melaney Chrisjohn,
Mackenzie Macy, Faith Coons, Makenzie Moon, Emery Hughes.
Second row: Ebony Hughes, Mya Acebron, Presten Holstine, Knox
Cannady, Brooks Hamilton, Caitlyn Detwiler, Mathew Dunbar,
Grace Tooley, Rodney Macy. Third row: Timothy Carmack-Roberts,
Lily Burkdoll, Caleb Detwiler, Josiah Meyer, Jot Meyer, Hunter
Johnson, Aydan Dunbar, Cash Miller, Kinsley Shaffer, Cooper
Moore. Back row: Stetson Miller, Connor Burkdoll, Russell Reed,
Cody Hammond, Benjamin Wuertz, Christian McCord, Aidan
Howland, Royce Ulrich
Vikings football faced with uncertainty as they head into a new league
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND The Central
Heights Vikings football team
won their first playoff game in
recent memory as second year
coach Sam Oram got his team to
buy in to both the playbook and
his philosophies but entering a
new league brings a new group
of teams to play.
In year 2, Coach Oram is hoping his team will now take the
next step in the progression.
We want to be competitive in
every game, the coach said.
We want to come away with a
winning season and try and win
two playoff games.
The Vikings finished last season 5-5, so despite winning a
playoff game it marked the 16th
consecutive year of finishing
the season without a winning
record.
This year comes with some
new teams on the schedule as
the Vikings transition to the
Three Rivers League.
I dont know much about a
few of the teams we will play,
but I think our toughest games
will be Jayhawk-Linn, Council
Grove and Humboldt.
Some key losses from last
year include Colten Caswell,
Jose Velez, Brycen Velez, Caden
Newell and Baker Moore.
B. Velez rushing for 1078
yards on 139 carries and scored
13 touchdowns. B. Velez added
202 yards receiving on 5 receptions and scored 3 more times
through the air.
Caswell led the defense with
7 sacks and finished fourth on
the team with 39 tackles.
Moore is a big loss in the
defensive backfield as he led the
team with 6 interceptions.
We are going to be a younger
team this year and are also thin
at the skilled position, Coach
Oram said. Coach Oram did say
the team does have sound young
talent though as well.
Last years leading tackler
junior Max Chrisjohn returns.
He finished the season with
53 tackles. Joining him on the
defense are seniors Landon
Lopez and Brody Roullett who
combined for 80 tackles and 7.5
sacks.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-24 / SUBMITTED
2024 Central Heights Football. Front row, from left: Sam Powell,
Gavin McMechan, Austin Reyes, Armoni Velez, Colt King, Landon
Lickteig, Cooper Tush, Ethan Rhodes. Middle row: Max Chrisjohn,
Gage Peine, Roarke Brock, Weston Starr, Carson Beets, Graham
Higbie, Reed Compton. Back row: Jayden Mooney-Robinson,
Dustin Smith, Benjamin Teegarden, Lawson McGurk, Landon
Lopez, Brody Roullett, Max Blankenbeker, Hans Higbie
Lady Vikings have talent, now
they just need to Learn to Win
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND Sometimes talent and experience
isnt enough for a team to turn around a recent
rough stretch when it comes to winning, and
that is exactly what 3rd year Central Heights
Vikings coach Marissa Horstick is looking for
her club to overcome.
A weakness of ours is we are still learning
what it takes to win games, Coach Horstick
said. A solid group of upperclassmen could be
just what it takes to turn things around as the
team has 4 seniors and 6 juniors.
Horstick added, If we can overcome our
doubt and learn to win games, we will be very
exciting to watch this year.
The team finished 8-23 last year but that
wasnt indicative of the growth the team made.
We went from a team that couldnt handle basic fundamental drills in practice to a
team that battled nearly every match, Coach
Horstick stated.
Despite being the first year in a new league as
the Vikings are joining the Three Rivers League,
the Vikings feel like they can make huge strides
this season.
Horstick stated she is unsure of what the
new competition will look like but does know
that Jayhawk-Linn and Crest appear to be the
toughest contenders in the league as they are
both very strong offensively.
Returning letterwinners include seniors
Sydney Evans, Jaley Ferguson, Lyla Hamblin
and Addison Ouellette as well as sophomore
Kaylor Matile.
Joining them will be a pair of freshmen, Joiey
Ferguson and Jayde Ogle, who if they play to
their full potential will be huge offensive and
defensive assets.
Evans is a senior setter in her 3rd year as the
starter. According to her coach she brings a ton
of experience, skill and leadership to the team.
Hamblin, a junior, is a middle hitter also in
her 3rd year. Coach Horstick will rely on her
offensive power and is also one of the better
defensive players on the team.
Our goal is to win. Our team is hungry to see
success, and have been working hard the last
two years to improve both during season and in
the off-season, Coach Horstick concluded.
Our youth are our future.
We support all activities that promote
2×2.5
educational and community
gssb
development of our youth.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-12-24 / SUBMITTED
2024 Central Heights Volleyball. Front row, from left: Jaley Ferguson, Abigail Roullett, Sydney Evans,
Addison Oullette. Second row: Kaylor Matile, Brynleigh Morrow, Kamberlyn Rubick, Lyla Hamblin, Joiey
Ferguson, Jayde Ogle. Third row: Cayleigh Latimer, Ashley Harkins, Jenna Sparks, Alaina Wade. Back
row: Charley Roehl, Carly Matile, Anna Heckman, Swaye Kershner, Hannah Matile, Aubrey Watkins.
Proud to support our area youth!
Stop by for your
2×4
favorite drinks & treats.
sonic
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Hwy. 59 Garnett
785-448-6393 or
785-448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
2×2.5
rockers photo
12
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
LOCAL
Richmond gets new fire station, among many other town happenings
by Pat Vining
The town of Richmond is not
catching on fire, but youll
certainly see red when you
notice the new fire station
which is East of Highway 59
Service Station. The 80ft. X
76ft. steel-sided building was
designed by Ken Coleman and
built by Quality Structures
in what seemed like a short
amount of time.
Quality Structures is
proud to help serve the city of
Richmond and local communities, said Rick Gudenkauf,
General Manager. This is only
one of numerous projects QSI
has helped with or been almost
totally responsible for as in the
case of the Show Barn for the
Richmond Free Fair Assn.
Gudenkauf said many
employees assisted with the
fire station project from Pat
DuPont in the beginning to Ken
Coleman in the design dept., to
Matt Batchelor who is also on
the Fire Dept. board.
There is also an attached
office/training area on the
south that is 40ft. X 24 ft., the
QSI manager said. There are
four bays for trucks which
leaves room for an addition
since the department now has
three trucks.
Background
information was furnished by Lester
Wuertz, Richmond Fire Dept.
president, who said QSI is in
the process of placing water and
electricity lines before the con-
crete floor is poured. QSI will
get bids for the sub-contractors.
Then, add the big doors and
finishing touches.and it will
be an exciting moment when
its ribbon-cutting time!
The Pearce Family Trust
gifted three acres to the Fire
Dept. four years ago for this
purpose, said Wuertz. He
offered these details: total
amount for the building is estimated to be $477,000, which
would have been considerably
more if the land hadnt been
donated, so that was a huge
help.
The mill levy for Richmond
Fire Dept. was increased by
three mills, which should pay
off the building in 12 years,
Wuertz explained. Certain
items such as a concrete apron
and drive way are not part of
the bid and will be dealt with
later.
The land was gifted in 2020
and its taken this long to get to
actually building, Wuertz said
with a chuckle, even though
jumping through the many
hoops necessary hasnt been all
that joyful.
Completion date is a wild
guess at this time, but may be
between Thanksgiving and the
first of the year, mused Wuertz.
Current fire chief is Jeremy
Skeen and assistant is Phil
Augustine. There are a dozen
volunteer fire fighters on call.
Call 911 to report a fire, just
as for any other emergency.
Members of the Fire Dept.
board in addition to Wuertz
are Aaron Clifton, Charlie
Hirt, Matt Bachelor and Donna
Fernandez. Bob Cardell is a
past board member who also
worked on this project.
The department currently
has two buildings, one a small,
very old one just East of the
Community Center which has
no heat. It is owned by the city
which will make any decisions
about it later.
The other, west of the fairgrounds, was built before 1980
on former Robert Gault property and houses two fire trucks
with no room to spare. A decision about this building has not
yet been made and probably
wont be until the fire dept. is
completely moved out of it, said
Wuertz.
A project of this kind takes
vision and perseverance plus
a lot of time and patience, and
the areas residents are grateful to the Richmond Fire Dept.
for the new, handsome building which will make service
faster and easier.
The new fire station isnt
the only thing going on in
Richmond.
If one drives west down
Central Ave. in Richmond,
toward Beachners Grain (formerly the Co-op), there are several new or almost new things
to see.
First, at the corner, is Mums
Company which will be open
weekends until all the chrysanthemums
are sold. This
is the fourth year Rick and
Julie Furst have sold mums
at that location and this year
they added asters. The couple
has plans for some creative
additions to the property in the
future.
Further west, the most
noticeable change will be the
City Hall sign on the north side
of the street, over the former
Patriots Bank building. City
Hall acquired the building in
the spring, made a few changes
and was soon enjoying handsome new offices. Faith Sage is
city clerk.
Richmonds mayor is Peg
Pearson and other city council members are John Overton,
Mike Topp, Helen Feuerborn
and Adam Horstick.
When City Hall vacated its
former location, the stage was
set for the adjacent Richmond
Public Library to add that
space and more than double its
size.
Weve needed more space
badly, said library director
Connie Weber, and this was
perfect for us. There is even a
common wall since at one time
the library had been part of the
caf which became City Hall.
Thats when a friend of
the library, Barbara Lane,
stepped up and donated the
total amount needed to purchase the former city hall. The
timing was perfect, also, since
the librarys Summer Reading
Program was about to start.
Words cant say how grateful we are to Barbara, said
Weber. This space will take
some repairs but will be used
as a meeting room for book
discussions, crafts, and other
purposes.
It was used immediately for
the Summer Reading Program
which had a total of 48 persons
of all ages involved. There were
33 craft or event days with total
attendance of 354 persons, said
Weber.
Donations will be accepted
for repairs, she added.
The city has condemned a
few properties and will probably add to that list.
Mike and Lynda Topp purchased a place across the highway from their house and had
M&L Mini Storage constructed.
(This is back on Highway 59,
not on Central Ave.)
It was booked full immediately, said Topp. They plan to
build a second row of 20 units
directly south of the new ones
soon.
Much redecorating and a few
changes have been done at the
Community Center, said Sandi
McIntosh, vice- president. The
most noticeable change is that
the Richmond High School
class pictures were removed
from the walls and placed in a
large book-like piece that is fastened to the wall. The pictures
are still easy to view.
Other changes include a
new ceiling, the whole place
painted, new interior doors,
and both bathrooms updated.
Income for the Community
Bldg. comes from a monthly
breakfast, renting the space,
Bingo which is the third
Sunday of each month, and the
annual Smorgasbord in April.
Officers in addition to
McIntosh are Aaron Clifton,
president, Christi Mader, Tracy
Clifton and Georgia Miller.
The
Richmond-Berea
Cemetery Assn. has made
improvements at both cemeteries the last couple of years,
said Ron Dunbar, president.
About $10,000 has been spent
to repair some of the oldest
stones, or monuments, which
were in poor condition. Dunbar
added that this work has not
increased the cemeterys budget (or mill levy).
Other board members are
Rob Cardell, Jerry Horstick,
Rhonda Frank, Lester Wuertz,
and Tom Horstick.
The Richmond Community
Museum invites you to mark
you calendar for Sunday, Oct.
27th, for a program by Prof.
Emeritus Jim Heiman who will
talk about Colorful Kansas City
Characters from WWI through
the 1930s. The program will
start at 2 pm because of an
early Chiefs game that day.
And thats a quick trip down
Richmonds main street and up
to cemetery hill.
Public Notice
Your RIGHT to know, guaranteed by Kansas Law.
Notice of hearing & to creditors – Cox Estate
other proceedings in the administration will be
given except for notice of final settlement of the
decedents estate. Should written objections to
simplified administration be filed with the Court,
the Court may order supervised administration
to ensue.
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, August 27, 2024.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
In the Matter of the Estate of
TERRY JOE COX, Deceased.
Case No. AN-2024-PR-000026
You are required to file your written defenses to
the admission of the decedents will to probate
on or before September 23rd, 2024, at 9:00
oclock a.m., in this Court in the City of Garnett
in Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the petition.
NOTICE OF HEARING AND
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
STATE OF KANSAS
COUNTY OF ANDERSON
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition dated
August 22nd, 2024, has been filed in this Court
by Kim Cox, as Executrix named in the Last Will
and Testament of the decedent praying that the
instrument attached to the petition, dated May
30th, 2023, be admitted into probate, and for
the appointment of Kim Cox as Executrix of said
Will, without bond.
You are further advised that the petitioner in this
matter has requested administration pursuant
to the Kansas Simplified Estates Act, and if
such request is granted the Court may not
supervise administration of the estate and no
further notice of any action of the executrix or
All creditors are notified to exhibit their demands
against the estate within four months from the
date of the first publication of this notice as provided by law, and if their demands are not thus
exhibited they shall be forever barred.
KIM COX, PETITIONER
Notice of change in control Notice of hearing & to
of a bank holding company creditors – West Estate
(Published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 12, 2024.)
NOTICE OF CHANGE IN CONTROL
OF A BANK HOLDING COMPANY
Cameron J.W. Cooper, Greeley, Kansas;
Carston D. Cooper, Lenexa, Kansas; Kelsey
L. Cooper, Prairie Village, Kansas; and Katelin
M. Shane, Louisburg, Kansas, intend to apply
to the Federal Reserve Board for permission
to acquire additional voting shares of Garnett
Bancshares, Inc., Garnett, Kansas, and to
join the Cooper family group, a group acting
in concert that controls Garnett Bancshares,
Inc. Garnett Bancshares, Inc. controls Patriots
Bank, Garnett, Kansas. The Federal Reserve
considers a number of factors in deciding
whether to approve the notice.
You are invited to submit comments in writing on an application filed with the Federal
Reserve Bank of Kansas City electronically
to KCApplicationComments@kc.frb.org or in
hard copy to: Jeff Imgarten, Assistant Vice
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
City, One Memorial Drive, Kansas City, Missouri
64198. The comment period will not end before
October 2, 2024 and may be somewhat longer.
The Board's procedures for processing applications may be found at 12 C.F.R. Part 262.25.
The Federal Reserve will consider your comments and any request for a public meeting or
formal hearing on the notice if they are received
in writing by the Reserve Bank on or before the
last day of the comment period.
sp12t1*
Who knows?
PREPARED AND APPROVED BY:
ls/William C. Walker
William C. Walker, No. 11978
112 West Fifth St., PO Box 441
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3747
FAX: (785) 448-5529
walkerlaw66032@yahoo.com
Attorney for Petitioner
We know. Buy a subscription, then YOULL know.
(785-448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
ag27t3*
The Anderson County Review is the official
newspaper of record for Anderson County,
The City of Garnett, USD 365, and the other
incorporated cities in Anderson County.
Notices published here meet all required
statutory legal parameters.
Agricultural
Garages
And More!
Eastern CO
Nebraska & Iowa
Eastern Wisconsin
719-822-3052
402-426-5022
712-600-2410
920-889-0960
Kansas &
Missouri
Western Wisconsin
816-858-7040
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that on August
6, 2024, a Petition was filed in this Court by
Brian P. Duncan on behalf of Kansas Estate
Recovery, Designee for Kansas Department
of Health and Environment, praying for the
appointment of an administrator.
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before the 25th day of
Dentistry
Family Care
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
Chiropractic
www.GingerichStructures.com
Brian P. Duncan
Kansas Estate Recovery
Petitioner
Brake & Duncan, LLC
P.O. Box 667
Chanute, KS 66720
Tel. (620) 431-2600
Attorneys for Petitioner
ag27t3*
427 S. Oak
Garnett
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
Eye Care
Pharmacy
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman
Chiropractic Physician
120 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422
M/W/F: 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
Hospice
Feel
better! (785) 448-6590
608-988-6338
S T R U C T U R E S
Health Services
4×6.5 Health
D IDirectory
RECTORY
(785) 448-6988
Commercial
Equestrian
Hobby Shops
September, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. of said day, in
the District Court sitting at the Anderson County
Courthouse, 100 E. 4th Street, in Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
In the Matter of the Estate of
due course upon the Petition.
DOROTHY JEAN WEST, deceased.
Case No. AN-2024-PR-000020
All creditors are notified to exhibit their demands
against the estate within four (4) months of the
date of first publication of this Notice, as provided by law, and if their demands are not thus
NOTICE OF HEARING AND
exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, August 27, 2024.)
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
School Physicals $35
DOT Physicals
National Registered &
Certified Medical Examiner
Drug/Alcohol tests available.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
FARM SAFETY
National Farm Safety
and Health Week
13
September 15-21, 2024
Organizers urge:
Dont learn safety
by accident
COVINGTON, LA For the 80th year in a
row, the United States is celebrating National
Farm Safety and Health Week (NFSHW)
during the third week of September this
year it takes place September 15-21, 2024.
NFSHW is a time to increase awareness
of the high injury and fatality risk in agriculture and to improve agricultural health
outcomes through outreach and education.
Data from the Census of Fatal Occupational
Injury shows that in 2022 the agriculture,
forestry, and fishing industries had the
highest rate of fatal work injuries compared
to other occupations, at 23.5 deaths per
100,000 full-time workers the majority due
to incidents with transportation or equipment (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2023).
Preventative education is key to reduce the
workplaces rates of injuries and fatalities,
which is aptly mirrored in the 2024 NFSHW
theme chosen by the National
Education Center for Agricultural Safety
(NECAS), Dont Learn Safety by Accident.
AgriSafe is proud to support this cause,
hosting 11 free educational webinars for
NFSHW from Monday the 16th through
Friday the 20th. Each weekday has a specific
topic: Monday is Equipment
and Rural Roadway Safety; Tuesday is Health
and Wellness; Wednesday is Generations
of Farming; Thursday is Confined Spaces;
and Friday is Reporting Ag Injuries. All
webinars will take place on Zoom from
11am-12pm CT and 1-2pm CT and will have
live Spanish interpretation (except for the
bonus webinar for ag educators which will
take place 3-4pm CT on Wednesday). Many
topics will be covered during this week,
including skid loader safety, farm succession planning, oxygen deficiency in
confined spaces, using apps to assess heat
stress risks, and more! For more information or to register for these free webinars
please visit: https://www.agrisafe.org/
nfshw/.
If you are interested in promoting
National Farm Safety and Health Week,
check out AgriSafes marketing materials for the webinars in our Dropbox, view
the NFSHW promotional toolkit from the
Upper Midwest Agricultural Safety
and Health Center (UMASH) on their
website, and access the NFSHW logo
from the National Education Center for
Agricultural Safety (NECAS) on their
website.
AgriSafe is grateful for the sponsors
and partners that make National Farm
Safety and Health Week successful: the
Central States Center for Agricultural
Health and Safety (CS-CASH); the
Southwest Center for Agricultural
Health, Injury Prevention, and Education;
the Southeastern Coastal Center for
Agricultural Health and Safety; the
Agri-Services Agency (ASA); CHS; Pork
Checkoff; the National
Corn Growers Association; GreenPoint
Ag; and Successful Farming.
For media inquiries, please contact Laura Siegel, AgriSafes Health
Communications Officer, at lsiegel@agrisafe.org. To explore options for sponsoring AgriSafe initiatives, please contact
Allison Flynn, AgriSafes Development
Coordinator, at aflynn@agrisafe.org
Stop accidents,
2x2before they stop you.
Farmers State
www.fsbkansas.com
Safety first last…always!
2×2
GSSB
Proudly partnering with our
area ag community since 1899.
2×2
state farm
2×2
brummel
2×2 Baumans
In appreciation of your
dedicated agricultural efforts!
benjamins
Dont just sit there…
practice safe farming!
LeRoy Kansas Toll Free 1-888-964-2225
Yates Center (620) 625-2271
Westphalia Toll Free 1-877-489-2521
Westphalia Tire Shop (785) 489-2216
Gridley (620) 836-2860
Visit our website at
www.leroycoop.coop
2×2
ekae
realty
Congratulations
Congratulations
THINK SAFETY
2×2
PSI
to all
all players,
players, coaches
coaches &
& families!
families!
to
PSI CROP
FARM Insurance
Moran, KS
Moran,
KS
(620) 237-4631
Insurance
Loren,
LorenRosan,
Korte
Korte
Chris,Loren
Christin
& David
(620) 237-4631
2×2 Valley R
2×2 And. Co.
Farm Bur Assn
209 S. Maple Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-0099
Iola, KS
Iola, KS
(620) 365-6908
(620) 365-6908
Rods Auto Repair
2×2 & Custom Exhaust
d
rods
auto 31 Storage
an Highway
Rod & Kim Wittman, Owners
Highway 31 & Lakeview Drive
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6535
14
Garnett to
conduct
Chlorine
Burn
starting
Oct. 1st
The City of Garnett Water
Department will be conducting
a free chlorine burn for disinfection of the water distribution system beginning October
1st, 2024. This process will last
about three to four weeks.
Flushing and chlorine burns
are routine distribution system maintenance conducted by
utilities with chloramine disinfection. Chlorine burns also
reduce the potential future
occurrence of coliform or other
types of bacteria in the system.
During this free chlorine
burn, the water disinfection
process will be changed from
chloramines to free chlorine
which is a stronger and faster-acting disinfectant. The
fire hydrants will be opened
to allow flushing of the system to help remove sediment
from the pipes and distribute
the change in disinfectant.
Customers may notice open
fire hydrants throughout the
city during this period. At the
end of the free burn, the standard chemicals used for disinfections will be reintroduced to
the system and be returned to
normal operating conditions.
Possible Noticeable Effects
It is important to understand that during this temporary change there may be some
discoloration or cloudiness in
the water and possibly a chlorine odor or taste. If this is
experienced, please run the
water through the tap until it
clears. Minor pressure fluctuations and small air pockets may
also occur. Fire hydrant flushing should remove most of the
color and odor, but some may
reach customer lines during
the process. Discoloration in
laundry is also possible during
this time. It is recommended that customers check for
discolored water before adding clothes to their washing
machine. If discolored water
appears, customers can set
their washing machine to spin
cycle to purge the water, and
then refill the machine with
clear water. In addition, customers may wish to purchase
and use a cleaning additive to
help prevent or remove any
discoloration that may occur.
Is the Water Safe to Drink?
Yes, the water is safe to
drink throughout this process
and boiling water is not necessary. Customers may notice a
change to the taste and smell
from the water and may want
to let their water tap run for
15 minutes or until the water
runs clear. Any odor and color
issues will subside as the flushing is completed. Customers
who use tap water for kidney
dialysis at home should properly monitor their process for
complete neutralization of disinfectant residual and should
contact their doctor for more
information. Customers utilizing the water for aquariums
should monitor the chlorine
residuals.
Why is this burn out
necessary?
The City routinely collects
samples and monitors the
water quality. The Garnett
Water Department is tasked
with ensuring that water in all
points of the system is acceptable to our customers. Over
time minerals and metals,
which are naturally present
in water sources, can increase
and attach to pipes and release
when there are changes in
pressure, resulting in discoloration, odor or affected taste.
Other processes such as nitrification and the growth of biofilm can also occur in water
distribution pipes. The biofilm
growth can cause a reduction
in the effectiveness of residual
disinfectants over time. This
free chlorine burn-out will
help cleanse the lines, reduce
the occurrence of nitrification
and biofilm, and ensure that
we provide quality water for
the citizens.
If you have questions please
contact Garnett City Hall,
785-448-5496, and the Garnett
Water Department will return
your call.
CLASSIFIEDS
LOCAL
WANT TO RENT
REAL ESTATE
Want to rent – furnished room
or small apartment. Also, lockable garage/shed for storage.
(903) 658-0767.
sp12t2*
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
Now offering
Auction
Services!
Call
(785) 448-3999
REAL ESTATE
1x1property
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
source
Chris Cygan
785-418-5435
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
CALL CRYSTAL METCALFE
TO SELL YOUR HOME
C-(913) 579-5288
O-(816) 629-4494
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
Injured in an accident? Dont
Accept the insurance companys first offer. Many injured
parties are entitled to cash settlements in the $10,000s. Get
a free evaluation to see what
your case is really worth. 100%
Free Evaluation. Call Now:
1-888-920-1883
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
Association @ 785-271-5304 tod
ay!
Paying top Ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Top Ca$h paid for old guitars! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin,
Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone,
Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker,
Prairie State, DAngelico,
Stromberg.
And
Gibson
Mandolins / Banjos. 855-4546658
Attention: Viagra and Cialis
Users! A cheaper alternative to
high drugstore prices! 50 Pill
Special – Only $99! 100% guaranteed. Call now: 1-866-481-0668
Stop overpaying for health
insurance! A recent study
shows that a majority of people struggle to pay for health
coverage. Let us show you how
much you can save. Call Now
for a no-obligation quote: 1-888519-3376 You will need to have
your zip code to connect to the
right provider.
Got an unwanted car???
Donate it to Patriotic Hearts.
Fast free pick up. All 50 States.
Patriotic Hearts programs
help veterans find work or
start their own business. Call
24/7: 855-612-3543.
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
2×2 jb construction
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
PUBLIC AUCTION
Yoder Auction Service
Friday, September 20 @ 10 a.m.
21534 1700 Rd., Garnett, Ks
(1 mile straight west of 7th Street Grocery on gravel road)
VEHICLE/ TRAILER
2005 Chevy Colorado 4×4, like new rubber,
4 dr, Heat, AC, PW, PS, 5 cylinder Vortec 3500
engine, 261k miles, runs & drives great!!
Carry-On 5×8 lawnmower trailer, fold down
end ramp, 1 7/8 ball hitch
FURNITURE
Rolling stainless steel tool chest w/ butcher
block top, with keys, very nice
La-Z- Boy recliner
Metal shelf
Small wood Knick knack stand
Smal rolling tables
Solid oak rolling wash stand
Small round solid wood side table
Solid Oak sofa table
Solid oak computer desk
Office chair
Folding side tables
Store shelf, 5T x 3.5 W
Cash register stand
Oak 3 square table
Drop leaf Formica top table
Vintage Walnut dresser, beveled mirror
Chest of drawers
Several small wood book shelves
Several larger bookcases
Hide-A-Bed sofa
Solid Wood TV stand
Wood hall tree
Rolling media cart
Oak computer desk
Sandusky metal storage cabinet w/ keys
Sterilite storage container
Vintage Campaigner dresser & night stand
Office table, computer table w/ power strip
3 pc. Round High Table w/ 2 chairs, drop leaf
Padded occasional chairs
Nice side tables
Oak coffee table
Nice full size sofa
Solid oak knee hole computer desk w/
charging ports, keys
Vintage Victorian walnut dresser w/ marble top
Wood framed oval wall mirror
Wood room dividers w/ hand carving
Sentry 1250 safe w/ combination
Solid wood wash stand
Walnut knee hole desk & chair
Kids table & 2 chairs
Oak TV stand
Oak matching coffee & end tables
Queen size bed
5 wood folding table
APPLIANCES
Kenmore dorm refrigerator
Haier chest freezer, 3 x 21
Sanyo 46 flatscreen TV
Vizio flat screen TV
Samsung 24 flat screen TV
Quartz infrared rolling heater, elec.
Movie Time air corn popper
Cuisinart coffee maker
Keurig coffee maker
HP printer
Acer Chrome book
Royal 210dx electronic cash register
Several dehumidifiers
Daewoo microwave oven
Several small elec. heaters
West Bend 42 cup coffee maker
Instant Pot
GE microwave
Sony stereo/5 CD changer/ cassette player
w/ speakers
HP Color Laser Jet Pro MFP M479 printer
Montgomery Ward Airline stereo/ record
player/ 8 track player
GARAGE/SHOP
300+ handsaws, all types, all kinds
Coleman 2500 Watt generator
Coleman 5000 Watt generator
Yard Machine Gold Series snow blower, 5 hp, 24
Aluminum extension ladder, 20 foot
Gorilla ladder, 4 in 1
5 aluminum stepladder
Metal 2 step step stool
Plastic shelving
Several patio loungers
Lots of complete military mess kits
Military folding table, military boots
Swedish Sjobergs Joiners work bench
Several other wood workbenches
Lots of hand tools
2- Delta 16 inch scroll saws
Rockwell model eight table saw
Craftsman Copy Crafter wood lathe, 4
Makita miter saw
Craftsman radial arm saw
Delta drill press, benchtop
Skilsaw miter saw on stand
HP bench grinder
Husqvarna chainsaw
Number of jumper cables
Heat lamps
Lots of gas cans, various sizes
Lots of garage/shop hardware and misc.
Propane torch kit
Several Shop Vacs
Heavy duty metal shop shelving
Floor Jack
Small battery charger
Shop brooms
Several single bit axes
Power cords and strips
All kinds of shop tools, hammers, wrenches,
screwdrivers, etc.
Appr. 10 pieces 6 galvanized stove pipe
JOHN DEERE ITEMS
5 old walking plows, 2 John Deeres
John Deere implement seat
Cast Iron JD bell, wall mount
John Deere lard can
John Deere dinner bucket,
John Deere gear housing plates, cast-iron
John Deere yardsticks
John Deere shopping bag
John Deere hats
John Deere thermometers
1895 John Deere planter lid
John Deere farmer account book
John Deere stickers
John Deere pictures
John Deere metal signs
John Deere blanket
John Deere clocks
John Deere toy tractors, gator, skid steer
John Deere 1010 toy crawler
John Deere matchbox holder
John Deere rain gauge
Several John Deere pick up trucks
John Deere dustpan
John Deere Banks
John Deere cups and plates
John Deere steering knob
Other miscellaneous John Deere items
OUTDOORS
Expanded metal patio table
Antique Xcelsior mens bike, Excelsior Mfg. Co.
Michigan City, Indiana.
Vintage Schwinn Tornado mens bike
Vintage Schwinn Delmar mens bike
Diamondback design Devine ladies bike
Roadmaster granite peals 26 inch mens bike
Vintage Huffy Panama Jack mens bike
Sun Dolphin 12 kayak
Storm Current Designs 18 kayak
2 wheel kayak cart
Several kayak paddles
Stihl FS 55RC straight shaft weedeater
Lawn aerator, pull type
70 gal. Poly tank
Several wheelbarrows
Roper garden tractor w/ front blade, not
running
Golf clubs
Yard and garden chemicals
Yard and garden tools, shovels, rakes, loppers, etc.
Electric fence insulators
Electric fence charger
Great shooter game feeder, NIB
Hand sprayers
Garden hoses
Pull type lawn spreader
Several wire pet cages, w/ plastic trays
Rhino-75 pop up hunting blind
Coleman Camping tent, cook stoves, sleeping
bags, etc.
Ozark Trail 7x 7 tent
Some fishing equipment
New roll of chicken netting, 4x 150
Rubber feed tub
Several outdoor planters
Cast iron boot scraper
Shepherds hooks
Wire Plant stand
Poly Patio bench w/ storage, 4 foot
Live trap
Rope lights
Several outdoor area rugs
Glass top patio table and four padded chairs
Several metal road signs
Large Igloo doghouse
HOUSEHOLD
Bavaria Eschenbach China set
Some Stoneware dinnerware
Baskets
Wine rack
Some Willow Tree figurines
Ceramic teapots
Lead Crystal cake stand
1950 Prestige Plate silverware set w/ chest
Pyrex & Corelle casserole dishes
MISCELLANEOUS
Lots of gun shop posters & metal signs
Cast iron NRA coat hanger
Lots of gun related flags
NRA cast iron bell, wood handle
Lots of NRA memorabilia
Lots of World War II books
1940s life magazines
3 Retro radio cassette players
1955 Chevy 3100 stepside toy truck, NIB
Military toys
3 gal. Unbreakable beverage dispenser w/
removable ice core
Several wicker baskets full of sewing stuff
Craft painting accessories
Plastic RV/ Hot tub steps
Steel Dumbbell set w/ stand, weights range
from 5 lbs. to 50 lbs.
Marcy Pro weight bench & weights
2 pet bed
Several kerosene lanterns
Several oil lamps
Yellow plastic mop bucket
Plastic storage box
Metal star
Table lamps
Office organizers & accessories
These items are all nice, clean and well cared for!! Lunch and porta potty on site
Owners: Mike & Jeanie Schainost
Nothing removed from premises until paid for. Cash, check and now accepting credit & debit cards w/ 3% per transaction fee.
Auction Company not responsible for theft, accident or loss
Statements made day of auction take precedence over printed details Pictures and sale bill on KansasAuctions.net
YODER AUCTION SERVICE
Auctioneers: Ben Yoder (785) 448-4419 Jr. Miller (620) 200-3007 James Yoder (620) 228-3548 Laverne Yoder (785) 204-2700
Ringman: Lavern Keim Clerk: Beth Rockers Cashiers: Karyn Yoder & Emily Keim
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
15
CLASSIFIEDS
Why do you think they call it
CREEPSLIST?
Advertise LOCALLY with people you trust.
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Advertising Rates
Classified Rates:
Up to 20 Words …………………….$6.00
Each addtl word……………………..64
(Commercial) …………………………76
Class Display……………..$9.85/clm.in.
Run Of Press Rates:
Standard ROP ……………$9.00/clm.in.
Color……………………………………..$65
Pre-print inserts ……………….$158.40
Front Page
Masthead Banner (w/color) ……$300
Bottom Page (w/color)…………..$100
Statewide/multi-state ………… Quote
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classified Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL:
admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
MISCELLANEOUS
Fertilization, weed control,
seeding, aeration and mosquito control. Call now for a
free quote. Ask about our first
application special! 1-877-5599593
Bath & Shower Updates in
as little as one day! Affordable
prices – No payments for 18
months! Lifetime warranty &
professional installs. Senior
& Military Discounts available. Call: 855-219-8849
Need New Windows? Drafty
rooms? Chipped or damaged
frames? Need outside noise
reduction? New, energy efficient windows may be the
answer! Call for a consultation
& free quote today. 1-866-7665558 You will need to have your
zip code to connect to the right
provider.
Aging
Roof ?
New
Homeowner? Storm Damage?
You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind
their work. Fast, free estimate.
Financing available. Call 1-877589-0093 Have zip code of property ready when calling!
Water Damage Cleanup &
Restoration: A small amount
of water can lead to major damage and mold growth in your
home. Our trusted professionals do complete repairs to protect your family and your
homes value! Call 24/7: 1-877586-6688. Have zip code of service location ready when you
call!
GARAGE SALES
26181 NE Neosho Road – King
size headboard, stroller, Coy
pond, books, end tables, home
decor, clothes, miscellaneous.
Friday, 8-6 and Saturday, 7-?
sp12t1*
307 North Cleveland Saturday, 7am-2pm. Bicycles,
clothing, Christmas, old tools
and misc.
sp12t1*
108 North Cleveland Street
– Family garage sale. Patio
chairs, porch swing, futon,
clothes, household items, typewriter and much more! sp12t1*
Multi-Family – Garage Sale.
Foltz, Ratliff, Parks. Friday,
September 13th 12-6; Saturday,
September 14th 8-1. Mens,
womens, juniors, kids, toys,
home decor. 1004 East Park Roa
d.
sp12t1*
Garage Sale
Davisons huge multi-family.
Fri. & Sat., 7 a.m.?
Sept. 13-14 Garnett Quonset Hut
Antique stand & small dresser w/mirror, barstools, ratan
bookshelf, tall wooden shelf,
2 big mirrors, American Girl
horse, stable, Jeep & camper,
bedding & houseware. Gas grill,
storm door 36×80, weight set
& bench, 20 pc China set, toys,
baby-adult clothing, shoes, new
overstock items.
GARAGE SALES
LAWN & GARDEN
Ahring & McMillan Family Garage Sale. Friday, September
13th and Saturday, September
14th, 7-?. 49 Lakeview Drive.
sp12t1*
324 West 5th Ave – Garnett.
September 14th, 7:30am-2pm.
Metal lockers, bookcase,
Armoire, material, toys, Bible
study stuff, knick-knacks.
sp12t1*
September 13th & 14th 8am-5pm, 109 East 7th, Garnett.
210 West 5th – Friday &
Saturday September 13th &
14th. Memoribilia, new games
and toys, much misc. sp12t1*
1107 S. Main – Saturday,
September
14th,
7am-?
Furniture, cherry picker,
clothes (womens, mens, boys),
China and crystalware, 2010
Chevy pickup truck bed lid.
sp12t1*
404 N. Spruce – Clothing, bedding, books, tapes, dog house
and or pen, wooden swing
set, miscellaneous. Ask about
hospital bed. 8-4 Friday and
Saturday. Rain cancels on each
day.
sp12t1*
1002 East Park Road Saturday, 7:30am-? Full-size
bed, tank heaters, tote bags,
purses, jeans, clothes, end
tables and baskets.
sp12t1*
641 West 1st Ave – Friday, 10-6;
Saturday, 8-noon. 2000 Honda
Gold Wing, 2011 6×10 Sharp
enclosed trailer, camping
equipment, Kayaks, furniture,
garden equipment, Stihl weedeater and chain saw.
sp12t1*
1 mile North of Lone Elm on Hwy to 500 Road, East 1/2
mile. Thursday, September 12
8-4; Friday, September 13th 8-4;
Saturday, September 14th 8-1.
Housier cabinet base, mid century and early American wooden furniture, kitchen items,
Halloween decor, luggage and
jewelry.
sp12t1*
McMoran, 907 East 4th Ave
– Friday & Saturday. Clothes
(summer and winter), holiday
decor, appliances and misc.
sp12t1*
28363 NW Maryland Road
– September 14th. Water skis,
sports equipment, calf huts,
goat stand, farm animal supplies, table saw, mitre saw,
misc, toys, household. sp12t1*
68 Leewood Lane – Sat. Sept.
14, 8-3 p.m. Lawnmower, lots of
knick knacks.
sp12t1*
MUSIC
Piano tuning/repair – Paul
Benner, BA Piano Technology.
45 years, all types, players. (785)
691-8844.
my7tf
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
Little John Sherwood
Farm
& Greenhouse
1×1.5
lit785-835-7057
Hardy
tle john
Garden Mums
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
SERVICES
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Monthly Specials
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Gate Greenhouse
2×2 Garden
garden
gate Fall mums are ready!
Stop by our greenhouse or visit us at
the Farmers Markets
in Garnett & Ottawa.
10003 NW 1600 Rd Westphalia
(from 7th St. in Garnett west 15 miles)
(785) 489 -2483 Hrs: Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat 9-4
2×3 ac road &
bridge
Happiness is… Anderson
County Auxiliary Collective
Goods
Gift/Book
Fair
Wednesday, September 18th,
9am-3pm in Hospital Lobby,
sp12t1*
Happiness is . . . Pre-ordering
your Trump/Vance yard sign at
Garnett Publishing Inc., 112 W.
6th, Garnett. $5/each.
ADVISORY BOARD VOLUNTEERS SOUGHT
2×3 city of garnett
board
vacancy
The Governing Body of the City of Garnett invites interested
persons who wish to fill a board vacancy, or who would like
to be considered for the next term of any advisory board or
volunteer position, vacant or not, to please submit their name
and statement of interest to Garnett City Hall for consideration. Currently there are vacancies on the Anderson County
Development Agency Board. Statement of Interest forms can
be found on our website www.simplygarnett.com or can be
picked up at City Hall. If interested, please fill out and submit
your forms by September 6th. As
always, if you have any questions, feel
free to call City Hall at (785) 448-5496
or email info@garnettks.net.
Jail Administrator
Public Auction
Saturday, September 28th @9:30
Address: 2679 Louisiana Rd Ottawa, Kansas
Shotguns, pistols, rifles, gun safe,
tractors, equipment, shop items, lawn
mowers, vehicles, outdoors,
and more.
Auctioneers note: Guns will sell first.
Go to kansasauctions.net/altic
to see full sale bill and pictures.
Seller: Richard Welch
Altic Auction Service: 785-893-4315
Auctioneers: Brady Altic and Lester Edgecomb
Yoder Auction Service
Saturday, September 14th @ 10 a.m.
449 Road Z. Hartford, Ks
EQUIPMENT
NEw Holland 68 square baler (twine)
New Holland 279 square baler (twine)
2- McCormick No. 9 sickle mowers (regular
gear)
Fore Cart
2- steel wheel wagons
New Idea 4 wheel manure spreader
Battery Winch hay carrier
Hay Elevator, electric motor
Pioneer 12 plow (left)
7 Double gang disc
Triple spring drag harrow
Old Side delivery rake
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . Breakfast
at the VFW! 9am-1pm Sunday,
September 15. Biscuits & gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage
and eggs.
sp5t2*
Anderson County Sheriffs Department
PUBLIC AUCTION
HORSES
1 Team Suffolk, 18 yr. old mare & 11 yr. old
gelding, broke
13 yr. old brood mare (Not Broke)
2 yr old Halflinger Filly (Lead Broke)
Happiness is… subscribing to
the Anderson County Review!
Call (785) 448-3121.
my19tf
Tractor sickle mower
Single horse cultivator
Single horse lawnmower
Grain crimper
New steel tongue & dolly for hay mower
2 Headgates
12 creep feeder panels
12 & 16 corral panels, appr. 15 total
3- Feed bunks (galvanized)
Hay ring
12 hog pen
3 ton grain bin, gravity flow
MISCELLANEOUS
5- New rolls woven wire
New wood fence posts
Used Steel T posts
Automatic waterer
Lots of horse shoes
Double & single trees
3 & 4 horse evener
Neck yoke
Woven wire fence stretcher
Small gas engines
Wheelbarrow
Table saw
Band saw
Drill press
Grist Mills
12 Gazebo
12 Gazebo package
8x 12 chicken coop w/ 8 run
HOUSEHOLD
Cream separator
4 burner propane cook stove
Hoosier cabinet
Sofa
Stainless Steel water heater
Miscellaneous glassware
Lots of miscellaneous items not listed Lunch and porta potty on site
Owners: Menno & Elmina Miller
Nothing removed from premises until paid for. Cash, check and now accepting credit & debit cards w/ 3% per transaction fee.
Auction Company not responsible for theft, accident or loss
Statements made day of auction take precedence over printed details Pictures and sale bill on KansasAuctions.net
YODER AUCTION SERVICE
Auctioneers: Ben Yoder (785) 448-4419 Jr. Miller (620) 200-3007 James Yoder (620) 228-3548 Laverne Yoder (785) 204-2700
Ringman: Lavern Keim Clerk: Beth Rockers Cashiers: Karyn Yoder & Emily Keim
Anderson County Sheriffs Office is accepting applications for Jail Administrator. Must have a high school diploma/equivalent and a valid drivers license. Responsibilities
include: Supervising Staff Scheduling Budgeting and
Accounting; Overseeing Vendors; Coordinating transports;
Maintaining jail equipment.
Experience in jail operations is a plus. Normal hours are
84 every two weeks M-F, subject to call out. Starting pay is
$19.39/hour, with a possible increase based on experience.
Call 785-448-56768 for the application or
stop by 135 E. 5th Ave., Garnett, KS 66032.
ANCOSO is an equal opportunity employer
and follows veterans preferences laws.
Anderson County Sheriffs Department
Detention Officer
As of 6-27-2024, the Deputy Sheriff, and Sheriff Secretary positions have been filled. We are looking to hire a
full-time detention Officer. Starting wage 18.12 an hour
possible increase for experience. You must have a high
school diploma, or its equivalent, valid driver license, and
be able to pass drug screening, criminal background check
and general knowledge test. We work 12 hour shifts and
offer health benefits paid vacation and sick
days. Apply at 135 E 5th Ave Garnett or call
785-448-5678.
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems, Inc.
is a leading manufacturer of large custom fabricated steel products for the energy,
chemical and aerospace industries. Products include: pressure vessels, heat
exchangers, nuclear components and gas pipeline equipment. We are seeking
qualified candidates at our Greeley, KS plant for the position of:
2×4 tfes
METAL TRADES
Candidates will perform general laborer duties including: abrasive blasting,
painting, unloading pipe, stock piling, grinding, operating overhead cranes, winch
trucks and hoisting equipment, installing pipe protectors for shipping.
Job-related experience preferred. We offer a competitive salary and an attractive
benefit package. Persons seeking a challenge and opportunity to innovate are
urged to apply in person or send a confidential resume detailing experience and
salary history to: hr@tfes.com
Taylor Forge is an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will
receive consideration for employment. EO/AA Employer/Veterans/Disabled.
208 N. Iron St., Paola, KS 66071 www.tfes.com EO/AA Employer/Veterans /Disabled
16
SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 12, 2024
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-12-2024 / SUBMITTED
Central Heights Connor Burkdoll (183), Cody Hammond (184) and Owen Miller (188) led their team to
a perfect score of 15 points at the Burlington Invitational on Thursday.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-12-2024 / DANE HICKS
ACs Aleck Smith wraps up the interloper as Wellsvilles Matt Newhouse picks off an errant Landon
Schillig pass. The AC Bulldogs would trail 28-0 after the first quarter on their way to a 49-7 defeat in
their season opener at home last Friday.
Wellsville overwhelms Bulldogs in season opener
GARNETT The wind was
sucked out of the excitement
of the season opener at home
last Friday night as Wellsville
struck early and often jumping
out to a 28-0 first quarter lead
en route to a 49-7 win.
Wellsville scored in the first
quarter on runs of 42, 8 and 1
yard and the fourth touchdown
on the period came on a 20 yard
pass and catch to finish the first
quarter leading 28-0.
Wellsville would continue to
pour it on in the second quarter
scoring on runs of 15 and 11
yards to open up a 42-0 halftime
lead.
The visitors would let off the
gas some in the second half
scoring a lone touchdown in
the third quarter on a 10 yard
pass and was held scoreless in
the fourth.
The Bulldogs finally got
on the board with a 35 yard
touchdown pass from Landon
Schillig to Christian Barnett in
the fourth quarter.
Anderson County was limited to 131 yards on 39 plays, good
for just 3.4 yards per play.
Schillig would finish the
game connecting on 8 of 16
passes, 74 yards, 1 touchdown
but did throw 2 interceptions.
Barnett led the Bulldogs
with 2 catches for 46 yards and
one touchdown.
Owen Thompson hauled in
2 passes for 15 yards, Aidan
Steele had 3 catches for 11
yards and Aleck Smith had 1
reception for 2 yards.
Camryn Wilson was limited to 26 yards rushing on 15
carries coming out of the backfield.
Steele toted the ball 5 times
for 15 yards, Schillig had 1
attempt for 9 yards and Barnett
had 2 rushes for 7 yards.
Quinton King led the defense
with 9 stops. Zach Schaffer was
close behind with 7 and then
Steele and Thompson each had
4 tackles.
Bulldog volleyball earn split to open season
FORT SCOTT On Wednesday,
the Anderson County Lady
Bulldogs traveled to Fort Scott
to square off against both Fort
Scott and Nevada, earning a
split for the evening.
In the opener, The Bulldogs
had the upper hand winning
the hard fought match in 3 sets.
AC won the first set 25-19 before
dropping the second set 25-22
but rebounded to win the decisive third set 25-23.
Nevada was a different story
as they downed the Bulldogs
25-21 in the opening match
before controlling the second
set to the tune of 25-13 for the
win.
AC girls golf opens season at Ottawa Invite
OTTAWA The Anderson
County girls golf team made the
short trip north to Ottawa to
open their season on Tuesday,
September 3 and came away
with a 4th place finish with
a score of 200, just 3 strokes
behind Basehor-Linwood for
third place.
Baldwin (120) and KC
Turner (126) were well out in
front of the field to take the top
two spots in the invitational.
Rylee Hill, the team's only
returning golfer, shot a 59
which was good for 23rd place.
A pair of freshman, Rylee
Hill (69) and Jaydyn Parks (74),
finished 38th and 44th respectively.
GARNETT The Jerry
Howarter Invitational kicked
off the cross country season
last Thursday, September
5th as the Anderson County
Bulldogs ran at the Garnett
Country Club.
The only varsity runner for
the Lady Bulldogs was Hope
Hill, who finished with a time
of 33:00.90, good for 25th place.
The varsity girls winner was
Bree Allen of Prairie View with
a time of 20:04.80. Baldwin won
the team title with a score of 29.
In the JV 2-mile run,
Samantha Mills finished with
a time of 19:00.00, good for 28th
place.
The AC boys top finisher
was Brodie Wiesner. Wiesner
finished with a time of 19:49.10,
good for 23rd place.
Following him was Grant
Nienstedt (20:09, 27th), Brody
Barnes (20:35, 30th), Wesley
Mills (21:37, 37rd), Zykin
Velvick (22:01, 41st) and Owen
Hawkins (25:20, 57th).
The varsity boys were paced
by Houston Mcgown, Girard,
with a time of 17:25.60. The top
boys team was Chanute with a
score of 39. Anderson County
finished in 5th with a total of
102.
Viking runners dominate season opener
BURLINGTON As heat indexes hit nearly 100 degrees last
Thursday at the Burlington
Invitational, the Central
Heights
Viking
runners
reigned supreme both individually and as a team.
The varsity boys and girls
both finished in 1st place, as
well as the JV boys.
Head coach Troy Prosser
couldn't have been happier
with how the season began,
After what seemed like a very
long summer and first few
weeks of practice, we finally
got to test ourselves against
outside competition.
The boys showed a level of
depth that isnt often seen in
cross country. The JV boys
swept the top 10 medals and
put 13 in the top 16 in the first
high school race of the day.
Then, the varsity boys knew
there would be some competition individually with the
defending 1A State Champion
and another runner that finished 5th at State last year.
Connor Burkdoll (1st) took
the top spot about half way
through the race and finished
it off with Cody Hammond
(2nd) 10 seconds back. Owen
Miller (4th) nearly gave the
Vikings the top three finishers but came up just 2 seconds
shy of third. Stetson Miller
finished 6th, the Meyer brothers, Jotham (7th) and Josiah
(8th), got to run their first
race together and Christian
McCord (9th) rounded out our
placing all seven boys in the
top nine. It was good enough
for a perfect team score of 15
points. For the varsity girls,
Lily Burkdoll finished in 2nd
place in her high school prep
debut. Close behind was Ebony
Hughes (4th) and Melaney
Chrisjohn (5th) who also established themselves near the
front pretty early on in a 2
Mile race that was shortened
from a 5K due to heat in the
absence of a 4K course being
available. Caitlynn Detwiler
(10th) joined them in the top 10
to give the Vikings four medalists. Arabella Dunbar (20th)
finished the scoring as our
fifth runner and Maya Acebron
(22nd) was poised throughout
her first competition. The team
finished 1st with 20 points – 16
ahead of the second place team.
A pair of JV girls also placed
in the top 10 to finish off a solid
afternoon.
The middle schoolers also
got into the mix with four of the
six runners (Makenzie Moon,
Kamden Moon, Elizabeth
Meyer and Emery Hughes) in
the medals while Rodney Macy
and Mackenzie Macy set new
personal bests.
Prosser said, One of the
most enjoyable parts of coaching this group of kids is how
much effort they put forth, not
only into their own workouts
and races but, in supporting
each other; cheering on all of
their teammates whether they
are middle schoolers, high
schoolers, boys or girls.
Everyone has each others
backs and our successes directly reflect that camaraderie,
Prosser added.
Varsity Boys – 2 Mile
Team – 1st place (15 points)
1st – Connor Burkdoll (10:25.01)
2nd – Cody Hammond (10:35.81)
4th – Owen Miller (10:44.86)
6th – Stetson Miller (11:17.73)
7th – Jotham Meyer (11:29.06)
8th – Josiah Meyer (11:29.10)
9th – Christian McCord (11:52.53)
Varsity Girl – 2 Mile
Team – 1st place (20 points)
2nd – Lily Burkdoll (14:09.94)
4th – Ebony Hughes (15:04.24)
5th – Melaney Chrisjohn
(15:06.30)
10th – Caitlynn Detwiler
(16:01.59)
20th – Arabella Dunbar (17:13.87)
22nd – Maya Acebron (17:29.15)
JV Boys – 2 Mile
Team – 1st place (15 points)
1st – Cooper Moore (12:19.77)
2nd – Hunter Johnson (12:37.74
3rd – Royce Ulrich (12:49.96)
4th – Ben Wuertz (12:50.71)
5th – Cash Miller (13:04.41)
6th – Knox Cannady (13:20.48)
7th – Aydan Dunbar (13:40.53)
8th – Aidan Howland (13:45.21)
9th – Mathew Dunbar (13:50.41)
10th – Caleb Detwiler (13:55.24)
13th – Brooks Hamilton (14:06.13)
14th – Russell Reed (14:08.42)
16th – Matthew Wilt (14:08.42)
29th – Presten Holstine (17:40.46)
JV Girls – 2 Mile
2nd – Faith Coons (17:21.42)
10th – Grace Tooley (24:26.94)
8th Grade Girls – 2 Mile
2nd – Mackenzie Moon (15:34.87)
7th Grade Boys – 1 Mile
14th – Rodney Macy (7:44.70)
7th Grade Girls – 1 Mile
4th – Emery Hughes (7:15.85)
6th – Kamden Moon (7:32.43)
9th – Elizabeth Meyer (7:43.35)
14th – Mackenzie Macy (8:36.78)
Bulldogs runners open up with home invite Lady Vikings swept to open the season
Vikings volleyball pick up first
wins of the season Saturday
UNIONTOWN After dropping
their first two games to Baxter
Springs and Yates Center on
Saturday, Central Heights
picked up a pair of wins by
knocking off Pleasanton and
Marmaton Valley.
Baxter Springs won their
match in 3 sets, dominating the
first (25-7) and third (25-11) sets.
Sandwiched between them was
a hard fought 25-23 win for the
Vikings.
Yates Center was somewhat
similar as Central Heights
dropped the first set (25-17) and
third set (25-14) after winning a
close second set 25-21.
Sophomore Kaylor Matile
led the Vikings in scoring
against Yates Center scoring 11
points on 15 serves, including a
team high 6 aces.
In the process of picking
up their first win of the season, Central Heights downed
Pleasanton in 2 sets, 25-18 and
25-15.
The defense of Sydney
Evans helped the Vikings control the game as she handled
34 Pleasanton volleys without
committing an error and having 7 assists.
The Vikings closed out
the day with a 2 set win over
Marmaton Valley (25-18, 25-10)
to improve their recored to 2-4
on the young season.
Ashley Harkins and Jaley
Ferguson led the scoring with
8 and 7 points respectively.
Evans continued her solid
play with 36 defensive attempts,
committed just 1 error while
credited with 10 assists.
Crest Lancers run at Howarter
Invitational in Garnett to open season
GARNETT In what is one of
the more difficult invitationals
the Crest Lancers will compete
at all season, the Crest girls
still had a trio of runners in
the top 15 despite squaring off
against much larger schools.
Josie Walter (21:36.60) and
Peyton Schmidt (22:11.40) more
than held their own finishing
in 6th and 9th respectively.
Aubrey Allen was just
inside the top 15 in 14th place
with a time of 23:26.60. Kallei
Robb rounded out the varsity
runners with a 26th place finish with a time of 25:42.00.
Bree Allen of Prairie View
(20:04.80) finished in 1st in the
varsity run.
The Lancer girls had a number of runners in the JV race as
well.
Lynnex Allen paced the 2
mile runners from Crest with
a time of 14:20, good for 2nd
place.
Allen was followed in the
JV race by by Piper Schmidt
(16:09, 12th), Jorden Allen
(16:47, 17th), Klaire Nilges
(16:58, 19th), Aidynn Edgerton
(17:33, 23rd) and Bailey Boone
(19:05, 30th).
The boys had a trio of JV
runners compete as well as
Isaac Francis (16:22, 25th),
Lukas Taylor (17:16, 31st) and
Wyatt Francis (17:55, 36th) all
ran the 2-mile event.
LACYGNE Central Heights
opened the season on the road
last Thursday traveling to
Prairie View High School to
play the host team as well as
Osawatomie, dropping both
games.
They were dominated in the
opener by Prairie View in 2
sets, losing 25-8 and 25-11.
In the second game on the
night, Osawatomie was too
much for the Vikings as well,
dropping them in 2 sets 25-13
and 25-18.
Lyla Hamblin led the way
with 9 serves, scoring 6 points
on 3 aces.
Lancers win opener that spanned
4 days due to power outage
YATES CENTER It was certainly an entertaining start
to the season for the Crest
Lancers football team as they
downed Yates Center 46-0 with
the game starting Friday night
and finishing up Monday afternoon due to a power outage.
Friday night, the Lancers
jumped out to a 14-0 lead after
the first quarter.
The Lancers really took control in the second quarter and
stretched the lead out to 28-0
with 7 minutes left when the
lights went out.
Due to the inability to get
the problem rectified quickly,
the game was postponed until
Monday afternoon at 2 p.m.
The odd start time comes
from trying to find a time that
worked for the referee crew
that had another junior varsity
game that evening.
Crest picked up right where
they left off, scoring 18 more
points in the final 7 minutes of
the 2nd quarter to end the game
at halftime due to the mercy
rule.
Yates Center was driving
right before halftime to possibly score to extend the game
into the second half but in the
waning seconds when Denton
Ramsey ripped the ball out of a
receivers hands as the Lancers
recovered the fumble to seal
the victory.
Quarterback Drake Weir
connected on 8 of 10 passes
for 79 yards and also toted the
ball 6 times for 28 yards and a
touchdown.
Henry White and Kade
Nilges each hauled in 3 passes,
for 51 and 16 yards respectively.
Jensen Barker led the
Lancers with 42 yards on 8 carries and 2 touchdowns. Ramsey
had 4 carries for 41 yards and
a score. Gentry McGhee had
just 2 carries but 38 yards and
a touchdown. Nilges had just 1
carry but it was a 3 yard touchdown run.
On defense Gentry led
the team with 8 tackles and
a sack. Weir added 6 tackles
and Denton chipped in with 4
tackles, 2 forced fumbles and a
fumble recovery.
2×5
Sonic TDOTW
Top Dog
of the
Week!
Lily
Burkdoll
The Central Heights cross
country freshman ran her first
high school meet with a time of
14:09.95 in the 2 mile event, finishing in 2nd place at Burlington
Top Dog of the Week wins a $10 Sonic gift card and our
special recognition vehicle window decal. Watch for
them on the road, and each week in
ANDERSON COUNTY FAIR
Winners Circle
2024 Fair Results & Photos
AN ANNUAL SUPPLEMENT TO THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW – September 12, 2024
2 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Judges
4-H Arts & Crafts/Visual Arts & Fiber Arts
…………………………………Audrey Lintner
…………………………….Rae Ann Johnson
Clothing Construction & Buymanship
…………………………………….Cheryl Sigel
4-H Photography………….Morgan Egidy
………………………………………. Patty Trull
………………………………….. Bill Patterson
4-H Fashion Revue……….Pamela Howe
4-H Foods. ………………….Pamela Howe
…………………………………… Rosie Bosse
……………………………………Cherry Coen
Dairy Cattle & Dairy Goats…………………
……………………………Matthew Anguiano
Horse…………………………….. Kallie Emig
Swine……………………………Dax Delozier
Rabbits………………………Katherine Wist
Sheep ………………………..Hunter Perrier
Goats. ………………………..Hunter Perrier
Livestock Judging………..Hyatt Frobose
Floriculture……………………….Jenny Tate
Round Robin . ………….Emma Lehmann
Beef & Bucket Calf…….Laramie Blakely
Poultry. ………………………Hannah Petkof
Woodworking/Electricity
………………………………….Shawn Turner
Banner…………………………….. 4
Bucket Calf………………………. 4
Consumer & Family Science.. 4
Engineering & Technology. … 4
Horse………………………………..4
Clothing & Textiles. …………….6
Fashion Revue……………………6
Fiber Arts. …………………………8
Florticulture. ………………………8
Food Nutrition. …………………10
Food Preservation…………….12
Geology…………………………..12
Self-Determined………………..12
STEM………………………………12
Visual Arts………………………..12
Woodwork………………………..14
Horticulture. …………………….14
Photography. …………………..16
Oakley Frobose posing
with her horse at the fair.
ANDERSON COUNTY FAIR
Winners Circle
2024 Fair Results & Photos
AN ANNUAL SUPPLEMENT TO THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW – SEPTEMBER 12, 2024
Beginning
Pages for Results
4-H
Gardening (Horticulture/Crops)
4H and Open . ……………….. Lyle Turner
Open Class Arts & Crafts
…………………………….Rae Ann Johnson
Open Food Preservation
……………………………………Cherry Coen
…………………………………….Rosie Bosse
Miscellaneous………..Kristie Stinebaugh
Geology………………………..Will Gilliland
Open Class Quilts…………… Kim Finney
Open Class Baking…………Kathy Norris
Open Class Photography……Patty Trull
On the Cover
FFA
Beef………………………………..18
Crops. …………………………….18
Dairy Cattle………………………18
Meat Goats………………………20
Poultry and Rabbits…………..21
Sheep……………………………..21
Swine………………………………22
OPEN CLASSES
Baking…………………………….22
Crafts………………………………23
Farm……………………………….24
Fiber Arts. ……………………….24
Florticulture. …………………….24
Food Preservation…………….26
Photography. …………………..26
Poultry. ……………………………27
Quilts………………………………27
PeeWee – Livestock…………..27
Results
Results information provided by the Frontier District
Research & Extension, Anderson County office. Thank you to
the staff at the Extension Office for their dedication to this magazine.
About the Photographer
Jessica Duncan, a dedicated
mother of four, has been weaving her passion for photography into her life since moving
to Garnett, Kansas, in 2016 from
Council Bluffs, Iowa. Balancing
the demands of being a full-time
overnight CNA in Olathe, Kansas,
with her growing interest in photography and being a full-time
mom and wife as well, Jessica has
immersed herself in studying various styles and techniques of photography. This year she took on
the role of the Anderson County
Fair Photographer. Her creative
journey reflects a deep commitment to capturing the
world around her, while her husband and family life
continue to inspire and ground her artistic vision.
Photo Reprints
Full color photo reprints of any photo appearing in this journal
are available through Garnett Publishing, 112 W. Sixth Ave., in
Garnett. Simply request a photo by noting the page number on
which it occurs, position of photo on page and a brief description
of the photo content.
The Winners Circle
Gwen Wiehl pre-judging for the Fashion
Revue.
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 3
Wynnly Gallaher riding her horse in the
horse show.
Sawyer Stevenson during the horse show.
Wynnly Gallaher posing with her horse.
Cohen Pracht, Whitt Jiminez and Bentley Pracht waiting for the parade to start.
Anderson County Jr. High and High School cheerleaders posing before the parade.
4 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
4-H Banner, Banner, 4-H Club Banner
Lucky 13, Blue
Seekers Not Slackers, Grand
Champion, Purple
4-H Bucket Calf, Bucket Calf, 10 to 12
year old exhibitor – First Year Bucket
Calf
Hannah Ivy, Blue
4-H Bucket Calf, Bucket Calf, 7 to 9 year
old exhibitor – First Year Bucket Calf
Lenny Elliott, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue
Oakley Frobose, Grand Champion,
Blue
Claire Holloway, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Kyler McDaniel, Blue
4-H Bucket Calf, Bucket Calf, 7 to 9 year
old exhibitor – Second Year Bucket Calf
Kason Durand, Blue, Champion 7 – 9 year
old Second Year Bucket Calf
Eva Jimenez, Blue, Reserve Champion 7 9 year old Second Year Bucket Calf
4-H Cloverbud Showcase, Cloverbud,
Exhibit
Jessa Ivy, Blue
Jessa Ivy, Blue
Jessa Ivy, Blue
4-H Consumer & Family Science, Food
– Nutrition, 4300: Non-Perishable Food
Product, 9-11 Years Old
Brett Gilbreth, Blue
Brett Gilbreth, Red
Hannah Ivy, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Purple, Reserve
Champion
4-H Consumer & Family Science, Food
– Nutrition, 4304: Non-Perishable Food
Product, 15-18 Years Old
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
4-H Consumer & Family Science, Food
– Nutrition, 4302: Non-Perishable Food
Product, 12-14 Years Old
Timber Vermillion, Red
4-H Consumer & Family Science, Food
– Nutrition, 4300: Non-Perishable Food
Product, 9-11 Years Old
Trax Vermillion, White
Congrat ulat ions to the
2×3
e xhibi tors on your
GACC
pursui t of the busine ss
of agr icul t ure .
4-H Consumer & Family Science, Fiber
Arts, 4114: Patchwork or Quilted
Article
McKayla Powell, Purple
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
McKenna Powell, Blue
4-H Engineering & Technology,
Woodworking, 4702: Other woodwork
Kason Durand, Grand Champion, Purple,
Champion
4-H Engineering & Technology,
Aerospace/Rocketry, 5520: Rocket made
from kit (9-13 years old)
Gracie Moyer, Grand Champion, Purple,
Champion
4-H Horse, Halter, 104: Stock-Type 3
years + gelding
Laramie Davis, Red
Oakley Frobose, Blue
Wynnly Gallaher, Blue
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Reserve Champion
Sawyer Stevenson, Grand Champion,
Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Halter, 105: Stock-Type 3
years + mare
Brook Hughes, Blue, Reserve Champion
Lyndsay Hughes, Blue
Haylee Lanham, Reserve Grand
Champion, Purple, Champion
4-H Horse, Halter, 304: Pony 3 years +
gelding
Oakley Frobose, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Horse Showmanship,
Intermediate Horse Showmanship
Lyndsay Hughes, Reserve Grand
Champion, White
Sawyer Stevenson, Grand Champion,
Blue
4-H Horse, Horse Showmanship, Junior
Horse Showmanship
Laramie Davis, Green
Oakley Frobose, White, Reserve
Champion
Wynnly Gallaher, Grand Champion, Red
4-H Horse, Horse Showmanship, Senior
Horse Showmanship
Brook Hughes, Grand Champion,
4-H Horse, Horse Showmanship,
Intermediate Horse Showmanship
Haylee Lanham, Red, Reserve Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H,
Intermediate Barrel Racing
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, Champion
2×3
GSSB
Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce
Morning Mingle Garnett Farmers Market
Become a Chamber member. Call (785) 448-6767.
CONGRATULATIONS
for all your hard work for the Anderson County Fair!
Courtney Tucker, Agent
415 SOUTH OAK. GARNETT (785) 448-2284
2×3
Yutzy
Congrats
to all fair
participants
and
winners!
The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 5
Anderson County Junior High Cheerleaders performing during the parade.
Brogan Marquardt showing his dog in the pet show.
Brook Hughes and her horse.
Brynlee Rockers and Brantley Hill with there goats.
Oakley Frobose.
6 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H,
Intermediate Barrel Racing
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H,
Intermediate Horsemanship
Sawyer Stevenson, Red, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H,
Intermediate Trail
Sawyer Stevenson, Red, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H,
Intermediate Western Pleas
Sawyer Stevenson, White, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Junior
Barrel Racing
Laramie Davis, Red
Oakley Frobose, White
Wynnly Gallaher, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Junior
Flags
Laramie Davis, White
Oakley Frobose, Red
Wynnly Gallaher, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Junior
Horsemanship
Laramie Davis, White
Wynnly Gallaher, Red, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Junior
Pole Bending
Laramie Davis, Red
Wynnly Gallaher, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Junior
Western Pleasure
Laramie Davis, White
Wynnly Gallaher, Red, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Horsemanship
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Barrel Racing
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Horsemanship
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Flags
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Horsemanship
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Pole Bending
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Reining
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Trail
Haylee Lanham, Red, Champion
4-H Horse, Performance – 4-H, Senior
Western Pleasure
Haylee Lanham, Blue, Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Clothing and
Textiles, 4000: Constructed item,
article, garment, or outfit 3 years
or less in project
Nora Cubit, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Clothing and
Textiles, 4002: Purchased garment or
outfit 3 years or less in project
Nora Cubit, Purple
Laramie Davis, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Purple, Champion
Myah Martin, Blue
Shelby OConnor, Blue
Shelby OConnor, Purple Reserve
Champion
Shelby OConnor, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Clothing and
Textiles, 4003: Purchased garment or
outfit 4 or more years in project
Rylie Davis, Blue
Rylie Davis, Purple
Rylie Davis, Purple
Aubrey Ellington, Blue
2×6 R&R
Elizabeth Ellington, Purple
Gracyn Ellington, Purple
Taryn Morrow, Purple
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple, Champion
Brynlee Rockers, Purple
Brynlee Rockers, Purple
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple, Reserve
Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Clothing and
Textiles, 4005: Recycled garment project
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Entomology,
4911: Introductory Collection for
Beginners
Hayden Powell, Grand Champion, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Fashion Revue,
03: Purchased garment or outfit 3 years
or less in project
Nora Cubit, Blue
Nora Cubit, Blue
Laramie Davis, Purple
Eva Jimenez, Purple
Myah Martin, Red
The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 7
Hayden Powell talking with judges for his geology box.
Elizabeth Ellington showing off her quilt for fiber arts.
Talon Jasper with Reserve Supreme Champion Breeding Meat Goat.
Oakley Frobose and her goat
8 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Shelby OConnor, Purple
Shelby OConnor, Reserve Grand
Champion, Purple
Shelby OConnor, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Fashion Revue,
03: Purchased garment or outfit 4 or
more years in project
Rylie Davis, Blue
Rylie Davis, Blue
Rylie Davis, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Purple
Elizabeth Ellington, Grand
Champion, Purple
Gracyn Ellington, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
Brynlee Rockers, Red
Brynlee Rockers, Red
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Fibert Arts,
4111: Crochet
Gracie Moyer, Blue
Reagan Witherspoon, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Fibert Arts,
4113: Needle Arts
Mary Rockers, Most Creative Fiber Arts,
Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Fibert Arts,
4114: Patchwork or Quilted Article
Aubrey Ellington, Purple
Elizabeth Ellington, Grand Champion
Fiber Arts, Purple
Claire Holloway, Purple
Hannah Ivy, Purple
Jaron Ludolph, Purple
Haylee Powell, Reserve Grand Champion
Arts, Purple
Haylee Powell, Most Original Fiber Arts,
Purple
Makenna Rockers, Blue
Mary Rockers, Blue
Miles Rockers, Blue
Miles Rockers, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Fibert Arts,
4117: Weaving
Eva Jimenez, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 01:
Celosia (cockscomb) plumed or crested
Gwendowlyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 02:
2×3
Prairieland Partners
Zinnia, any color
Brystol Barnes, Red
Rhett Cubit, Blue
Rhett Cubit, Blue
Jaron Ludolph, Blue
Haylee Powell, Blue
Haylee Powell, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 03:
Marigold Large, any color
Haylee Powell, Blue
Haylee Powell, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 04:
Marigold Small, any color
Haylee Powell, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 05:
Gladiolus, any color
Haylee Powell, Blue
Haylee Powell, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 06:
Dahlia Large, any color
Haylee Powell, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 07:
Dahilia Small, any color
Haylee Powell, Blue
Haylee Powell, Purble
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 08:
Roses Hybrid Tea, any color
Oakley Frobose, Red
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 09:
Roses Floribunda, any color
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 10:
Sunflower, large
Haylee Powell, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 11:
Sunflower, small
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Jaron Ludolph, Blue
Haylee Powell, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 12:
Perennial, any other
Oakley Frobose, Purple
Jaron Ludolph, Red
Haylee Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 13:
Annual, any other
Nora Cubit, Blue
Nora Cubit, Red
Oakley Frobose, Red
Congratulations to the exhibitors
for your work and commitment to
your agricultural education.
Terry J. Solander, Atty. at Law
503 S. Oak Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6131
FAX: (785) 448-2475
2×3
Brummel Farm
2×3 Arnolds
Greenhouse
The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 9
Aubrey Ellington, Gracyn Ellington and Elizabeth Ellington.
Lenny Elliott with his cat at the pet show.
Sawyer Stevenson exiting the arena.
Case Traul with his cat Shivery.
Haylee Lanham walking her horse.
10 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Jaron Ludolph, Purple
Haylee Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Purple
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 16:
Current County Fair Theme
Haylee Powell, Purple, Champion
McKenna Powell, Purple
Chase Sobba, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple, Reserve
Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 17:
Holiday of Your Choice
McKayla Powell, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Grand Champion
Flower Exhibit, Purple, Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 18:
Country Wild Flowers
Nora Cubit, Blue
Haylee Powell, Champion Floral
Arrangement, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple, Reserve
Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Floriculture, 19:
Miscellaneous Arrangement
Brystol Barnes, Purple
Jaron Ludolph, Red
Benjamin Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4300-1: Non-Perishable Food Product,
7-8 Years Old
Rhett Cubit, Red
Rhett Cubit, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Purple
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Purple
Oakley Frobose, Blue
Oakley Frobose, Purple
Mackinley Hill, White
Mackinley Hill, White
Claire Holloway, Purple
Claire Holloway, Red
Claire Holloway, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Red
Jaron Ludolph, Blue
Brax Rockers, Blue
Makenna Rockers, Blue
on in!
Well Spring
keep you
rolling
Let us get you ready for warm weather
right through the fall.
2×6 projects, travel & recreation
Lawnmower Tires
ATV Tires Tiller Tires Golf Cart Tires
Wolken
Tire
Tires to handle everything from heavy hauling, mowing, green
maintenance, to general purpose needs.
Tires that offer puncture-resistant tread patterns, low wear rates and
features for high maneuverability and less ground disturbance.
Tire Repair Farm Tires (front & rear)
Pickup Tires Car Tires Alignments
Brake Work Automotive Care
601 South Oak Garnett 785-448-3212
Miles Rockers, Reserve Grand
Champion, Champion Food Exhibit,
Purple, Class Champion
Benjamin Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4300-1: Non-Perishable Food Product,
9-11 Years Old
Brailyn Barnes, Purple
Brailyn Barnes, Purple
Nora Cubit, Purple
Nora Cubit, Red
Eva Jimenez, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Red
Myah Martin, Blue
Myah Martin, Red
Gracie Moyer, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Red
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Britni Zook, Red
Britni Zook, Purple, Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4300-2: Non-Perishable Food Product,
12-14 Years Old
Baylee Barnes, Red
Baylee Barnes, Blue
Brystol Barnes, Red
Brystol Barnes, Red
Braden Gillespie, Blue
Braden Gillespie, Blue
Emma Good, Red
Emma Good, Blue
Rylee Hill, Blue
Heidi Moyer, Purple
Shelby OConnor, Red
Jadyn Parks, Purple
Jadyn Parks, Purple
Hope Pracht, Purple, Reserve Champion
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue
Sawyer Stevenson, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4300-3: Non-Perishable Food Product,
15-18 Years Old
Obree Barnes, Red
Emma Cubit, Blue
Blaine King, Blue
Landon Kraft, Red
Brynleigh Morrow, Red
Hank Newton, Blue
Hank Newton, Grand Champion Food
Exhibit, Purple, Champion
Hank Newton, Purple, Champion
Hank Newton, Purple
Sayleen Partida, Blue
Reagan Witherspoon, Purple, Reserve
The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 11
Garnett Rec cheerleaders performing during the parade.
Rylie Davis with her cow.
Two thumbs up for the inflatable slide!
Elizabeth Ellington during the Fashion
Revue.
2×3 GPI
Claire Holloway
Taryn Morrow.
Congrats to all winners and participants!
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
12 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Grand Champion
Reagan Witherspoon, Red
Brekyn Zook, Purple
Brekyn Zook, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4306-2: Food Gift Basket, 9-11 Years Old
Nora Cubit, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4306-3: Food Gift Basket, 12-14 Years Old
Emma Good, Purple
Sawyer Stevenson, Purple, Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4306-4: Food Gift Basket, 15-18 Years Old
Elizabeth Ellington, Purple
Brynleigh Morrow, Reserve Champion
Food Preservation, Purple, Class Reserve
Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4310-1: Food Flop Beginner 7-8 Years
Old
Lucas Lizer, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4310-2: Food Flop Junior 9-11 Years Old
Brailyn Barnes, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4310-4: Food Flop Senior 15-18 Years
Old
Obree Barnes, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4311-2: Food Preservation Exhibit Ages
9-11 Years Old
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4312-2: Recipe Box/Notebook Ages 9-11
Years Old
Haylee Powell, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food – Nutrition,
4312-3: Recipe Box/Notebook Ages 12-14
Years Old
Braden Gillespie, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food Preservation 4351: Fruits, Juices, Fruit
Mixtures; One Jar
Hank Newton, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food Preservation, 4350: Sweet Spreads,
Syrups; One Jar
Hank Newton, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Food Preservation, 4353: Pickles (Fruit
or Vegetable), Fermented Foods and
Relishes and Chutney; One Jar
Hank Newton, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Geology, 5100:
Junior–first year exhibit-9 specimens
Hayden Powell, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Geology, 5201:
Geology – 30 rocks / Intermediate
9-13years old
Hudson Powell, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Self
Determined, Item or article
Colton Bennett, Reserve Grand
Champion Self Determined, Purple
Reserve Champion
Blaine King, Grand Champion Selt
Determined, Purple, Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H STEM Architectural Block Construction, 5710:
Level 1 Diorama
Kason Durand, Purple
Miles Rockers, Grand Champion, Purple,
Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H STEM Architectural Block Construction, 5710:
Introductory-Level I classes(about 1-3
years experience) Diorama illustrating
at least 2 architectural features beyond
floors, ceilings & walls
Brantley Hill, Blue, Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H STEM Spacetech – Astronomy, Astronomy
Educational Display
Genevieve Brackett, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Visual Arts,
4501: Fine Arts
Baylee Barnes, Blue
Baylee Barnes, Purple
Shelby OConnor, Purple
Brynlee Rockers, Purple
Makenna Rockers, Purple
2×3
Farmers State
Bank
www.fsbkansas.com
Makenna Rockers, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Visual Arts,
4502: Clay and Ceramics
Baylee Barnes, Purple
Carter Barnes, Blue
Benjamin Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Visual Arts,
4503: Leather and Jewelry
Nora Cubit, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Visual Arts,
4504: Three-Dimensional
Hayden Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Purple
Benjamin Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Visual Arts,
4505: General Crafts
YOUR FARM
INSURANCE SPECIALISTS
Congratulations to the participants of the 2024
With nearly 100 years of combined experience,
TrustPoint Insurance is proud to be your trusted
partner in safeguarding agricultural investments.
Kristen
Hermreck
620-797-0097
GARNETT
BURLINGTON
EMPORIA
HAYS
785.448.3714 | TRUSTPOINTSERVICES.NET
The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 13
Timber Vermillion exiting the arena with
her cow.
Briar Barnes and Callie Durand hanging out in the livestock building with the baby cows.
Kimora Coleman.
Hannah Ivy with her champion bucket calf.
Addilynn Reed on her way to show her
cow.
Haylee Lanham with her Reserve Grand
Champion Market Meat Goat.
Talon Jasper and Jayden Parks.
.Hudson Powell.
14 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Baylee Barnes, Blue
Carter Barnes, Purple
Nora Cubit, Purple
Aubrey Ellington, Purple
Aubrey Ellington, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Purple
Lenny Elliott, Purple
Lenny Elliott, Most Creative Visual Arts
Exhibit, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Brantley Hill, Blue
Mackinley Hill, Blue
Rylee Hill, Purple
Rylee Hill, Purple
Claire Holloway, Purple
Claire Holloway, Purple
Eva Jimenez, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Blue
Blaine King, Purple
Blaine King, Purple
Blaine King, Purple
Heidi Moyer, Blue
Hayden Powell, Purple
Hayden Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Purple
Hudson Powell, Purple
Hudson Powell, Purple
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Purple
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Purple
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
McKenna Powell, Purple
McKenna Powell, Purple
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Grand Champion,
Purple, Champion
McKenna Powell, Blue
Hope Pracht, Purple
Brax Rockers, Purple
Brynlee Rockers, Purple
Miles Rockers, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Reserve Grand
Champion, Purple, Reserve Champion
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Visual Arts,
4506: Recycled Crafts
Congratulations to the winners
2×3 and all fair participants!
Barnes Seed
Carter Barnes, Purple
Rhett Cubit, Blue
Blaine King, Purple
McKayla Powell, Purple
McKayla Powell, Most Original Visual
Arts Exhibit, Purple
McKenna Powell, Purple
McKenna Powell, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Woodwork,
4701:Furniture for household or lawn
use
Braxton Barnes, Reserve Grand
Champion, Purple, Reserve Champion
Landon schillig, Purple
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H Woodwork, 4702:
Other Woodwork
Nash Holloway, Blue
Hayden Powell, Blue
Hudson Powell, Blue
Brax Rockers, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 01: Potatoes Red, five
Hank Newton, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 02: Potatoes White, five
Hank Newton, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Proud to support
2×6 neighborhood
the
State Farm
As your local State Farm agent, I'll be there whenever
you need me with Good Neighbor service you can
count on. Give me a call.
Keegan Barnes
1200 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett, KS 66032 785-304-2500
keegan.barnes@plantpioneer.com
2×3
Anderson County
Farm Bureau
Amanda Jones
Agent
Amber Newell
Sales Associate
Proud to Support the Anderson County Fair and
Exhibitors!
Agent
504 W. Redbud
Garnett, KS 66032
Bus: 785-448-1660
www.ryandisbrow.com
County Coordinator
Crop Agent
Ryan Disbrow CLU RICP ChFC
Kendra Louk
Janice Parks
Horticulture, 07: Tomatoes Cherry
Ornamental, five
Hank Newton, Red
Oakley Frobose, Red
Miles Rockers, Blue
Benjamin Wiehl, Reserve Grand
Champion Garden Exhibit, Purple,
Reserve Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 08: Tomatoes Grape, five
Hank Newton, Red
Oakley Frobose, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 10 Onions Yellow, five
Hank Newton, Grand Champion Garden
Exhibit, Purple, Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 19: Okra, five
Hank Newton, Red
Lucas Lizer, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 20: Cucumbers, five
Hank Newton, Red
Oakley Frobose, Blue
Lucas Lizer, White
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 22: Peppers Not Bell, five
Oakley Frobose, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Kendra Louk
Sales Associate
213 S. Maple Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-6125
State Farm
Bloomington, IL
The Winners Circle
Tri-Kos float in the Anderson County Fair parade celebrating their
50th anniversary.
Laramie Davis with the horse judges.
Trax Vermillion.
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 15
Mya Lutz with her dog Chief during the pet show.
Holden Firestone.
Rhett Cubit and sister Nora Cubit showing their rabbits at the
poultry and rabbit show.
Nora Traul showing the judges her cat Ruby.
16 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Horticulture, 22: PeppersJalapeno, five
Oakley Frobose, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 27: Squash Summer, one
Nora Cubit, Blue
Landon Kraft, Red
Lucas Lizer, Red
Hank Newton, Red
Hank Newton, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 34: Pumpkin, one
Hank Newton, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA 36: Sweet
Corn, 10 ears
Hank Newton, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 39b: Misc Vegetable
Medium not listed, five
Oakley Frobose, Red
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 40: Garden Display
Hank Newton, Champion Garden
Display, Purple, Class Champion
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 41: Fresh Culinary Herbs
Nora Cubit, Blue
Nora Cubit, Red
Rhett Cubit, Red
Landon Kraft, Red
Lucas Lizer, Blue
4-H Non Livestock, 4-H/FFA
Horticulture, 43: Tree Fruits
Lucas Lizer, Red
4-H Photography, 4-H Photography,
4800: Color Photos – 3 Years or Less in
Project
Baylee Barnes, Grand Champion, Purple
Baylee Barnes, Purple, Reserve
Champion
Baylee Barnes, Blue
Baylee Barnes, Renae Young Award
Purple
Carter Barnes, Red
Carter Barnes, Renae Young Award
Purple
Obree Barnes, Blue
Obree Barnes, Purple
Obree Barnes, Blue
Obree Barnes, Purple
Lenny Elliott, Purple
Lenny Elliott, Renae Young Award
Purple
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Purple
Claire Holloway, Red
Claire Holloway, Blue
Claire Holloway, Blue
Nash Holloway, Red
Nash Holloway, Red
Nash Holloway, Purple
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Purple
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Red
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Jaron Ludolph, Blue
Sage Partida, Blue
Sage Partida, Purple
Sienna Partida, Red
Sienna Partida, Blue
Sylah Partida, Blue
Sylah Partida, Red
Hayden Powell, Blue
Hayden Powell, Blue
Hayden Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Blue
Haylee Powell, Purple
Haylee Powell, Purple
Hudson Powell, Red
Hudson Powell, Blue
Benjamin Wiehl, Blue
Benjamin Wiehl, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Purple
4-H Photography, 4-H Photography,
4801: Color Photos – 4-7 Years or Less in
Project
Aubrey Ellington, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Purple
Elizabeth Ellington, Blue
Elizabeth Ellington, Red
Elizabeth Ellington, Blue
Elizabeth Ellington, Purple
Elizabeth Ellington, Purple
Myah Martin, Red
Myah Martin, Blue
Gracie Moyer, Blue
Gracie Moyer, Blue
Gracie Moyer, Blue
Gracie Moyer, Purple
Heidi Moyer, Red
Heidi Moyer, Blue
Heidi Moyer, Red
Heidi Moyer, Red
Sayleen Partida, Blue
Sayleen Partida, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
McKayla Powell, Blue
Wyatt Robb, Red
Wyatt Robb, Blue
Wyatt Robb, Blue
Zander Robb, Purple
Zander Robb, Blue
Zander Robb, Red
Brynlee Rockers, Purple
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
4-H Photography, 4-H Photography,
4802: Color Photos – 8 Years or More in
Project
Gunner Ellington, Blue
Blaine King, Purple
Blaine King, Renae Young Award, Purple
Blaine King, Purple
Blaine King, Purple
Blaine King, Purple
Landon Kraft, Renae Young Award,
Purple
Landon Kraft, Blue
Brynleigh Morrow, Purple
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue
Brynleigh Morrow, Renae Young Award,
Purple
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Purple
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Purple
Taryn Morrow, Renae Young Award,
Purple
Taryn Morrow, Blue
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
4-H Photography, 4-H Photography,
4803: Black and White Photos – 3 Years
or Less in Project
Baylee Barnes, Purple
Baylee Barnes, Blue
Carter Barnes, Red
Carter Barnes, Blue
Obree Barnes, Blue
Obree Barnes, Blue
Obree Barnes, Blue
Obree Barnes, Purple
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Red
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Claire Holloway, Blue
Nash Holloway, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Red
Jaron Ludolph, Blue
Hayden Powell, Blue
Haylee Powell, Blue
Benjamin Wiehl, Purple
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H Photography, 4-H Photography,
4804: Black and White Photos – 4-7
Years in Project
Elizabeth Ellington, Purple
Elizabeth Ellington, Renae Young Award,
Purple
Sayleen Partida, Grand Champion,
Purple
McKayla Powell, Purple
McKayla Powell, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Renae Young Award,
The Winners Circle
Jayden Parks showing her goat.
Fairgoers enjoying the rides at the fair.
Talon Jasper with her cow.
Kyen Gaines jumping at the fair following
the parade.
The Anderson County Flywheelers tractor
during the parade.
Sayleen Partida.
Laramie Davis.
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 17
18 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Purple
Brynlee Rockers, Renae Young Award,
Purple
4-H Photography, 4-H Photography,
4805: Black and White Photos – 8 Years
in Project
Blaine King, Blue
Landon Kraft, Blue
McKenna Powell, Blue
McKenna Powell, Purple
4-H/FFA Beef, Beef Showmanship, 1:
Senior Beef Showmanship
Gunner Ellington, Blue, 3
Talon Jasper, Blue, 1
Jaden Teter, 2
Truett Vermillion, 4
4-H/FFA Beef, Beef Showmanship, 2:
Intermediate Beef Showmanship
Braxton Barnes, Blue, Blue
Cayden Davis, Blue, 1, Blue, 1
Rylie Davis, Blue, 2, Blue, 2
Gracyn Ellington, Blue, Blue, 4
Maxwell Jimenez, Blue, Blue
Hope Pracht, Blue, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Blue, Blue, 3
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, Blue
Timber Vermillion, Blue, Blue
Chance Witherspoon, Blue, Blue
4-H/FFA Beef, Beef Showmanship, 3:
Junior Beef Showmanship
Laramie Davis, Blue, 3
Kason Durand, Blue
Brett Gilbreth, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Blue
Myah Martin, Blue, 4
Addilynn Reed, Blue, 1
Trax Vermillion, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue, 2
4-H/FFA Beef, Breeding Heifer, 1107:
Crossbred Junior Yearling, 1/1 to 4/30
previous year
Rylie Davis, Blue, 2, Reserve Supreme
Champion Breeding Heifer
4-H/FFA Beef, Breeding Heifer, 4: AOB
Junior Yearling, 1/1 to 04/30 previous
year
Laramie Davis, Blue, 1, Champion
Jaden Teter, Blue, 2, Reserve Champion
4-H/FFA Beef, Breeding Heifer, 605:
Limousin Senior Calf, 9/1 to 12/31 previous year
Addilynn Reed, Blue, 2
Brynlee Rockers, Blue, 1, Supreme
Champion Breeding Heifer, Blue, 1 Class
Champion
4-H/FFA Beef, Breeding Heifer, 607:
Limousin Junior Yearling, 1/1 to 4/30
previous year
Maxwell Jiminez, Blue, 1, Class Reserve
Champion
Addilynn Reed, Blue, 2
4-H/FFA Beef, Breeding Heifer, 707:
Maine-Anjou Junior Yearling, 1/1 to
4/30 previous year
Brailyn Barnes, Blue, 1, Champion
Hope Pracht, Blue, 2, Reserve Champion
Jaden Teter, Blue, 3
4-H/FFA Beef, Breeding Heifer, 907:
Simmental Junior Yearling, 1/1 to 4/30
previous year
Brystol Barnes, Blue, 6
Cayden Davis, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion
Rylie Davis, Blue, 1, Champion
Gunner Ellington, Blue, 3
Chance Witherspoon, Blue, 5
Reagan Witherspoon, Blue, 4
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, Anderson
County Born and Bred
Gunner Ellington, Blue, 2
Talon Jasper, Blue, 1
Maxwell Jimenez, Blue, 5
Landon Schillig, Blue, 4
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue. 3
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, AOB
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, 3, Blue
Jaden Teter, Blue, 2, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, 1, Champion
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue, 2, Reserve
Grand Champion
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, Chianina
Braxton Barnes, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion Chianina
Rylie Davis, Blue, 3, Blue
Landon Schillig, Blue, 1 ,Champion
Chianina
2x3Congratulations to
Anderson
County
all our
exhibitors!
Farm Bureau
Complete automotive inspections and computerized estimates to
repair dents, crushed doors, broken lights and windows and more.
John Dalsing, owner
For more information click:
www.midwest-collision.com
Paola, Ks. (913) 2944016
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, Crossbred /
01: Crossbred – Show Class 1
Kason Durand, Blue, 2, Blue
Brett Gilbreth, Blue, 4, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Blue, 3, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Blue, 5, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Blue, 1, Blue
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, Crossbred /
02: Crossbred – Show Class 2
Nash Holloway, Blue, 4, Blue
Talon Jasper, Blue, 1, Grand Champion,
Blue, 1, Champion
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion
Reagan Witherspoon, Blue, 3, Blue
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, Limousin
Market Steer
Gunner Ellington, Blue, 1, Champion
Myah Martin, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion
Timber Vermillion, Blue, 3
Trax Vermillion, Blue, 4
Truett Vermillion, Blue, 5
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, MaineAnjou
Cayden Davis, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion
Gracyn Ellington, Blue, 1, Champion
Hope Pracht, Blue, 3, Blue
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, Market
Heifer
Talon Jasper, Blue, Champion
4-H/FFA Beef, Market Beef, Simmental
Brody Barnes, Blue, 1, Champion
Simmental
Maxwell Jimenez, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion Simmental
Jaden Teter, Blue, 4, Blue
Chance Witherspoon, Blue, 3, Blue
4-H/FFA Crops, 4-H/FFA Crops, 2401:
Corn – Yellow
Nash Holloway, Blue
Nash Holloway, Grand Champion,
Purple, Reserve Champion
Rhett Parks, Reserve Grand Champion,
Purple, Reserve Champion
Austin Teter, Red
4-H/FFA Crops, 4-H/FFA Crops, 2420:
Soybeans – Bundle of 5 plants
Nash Holloway, Blue
Nash Holloway, Blue
Rhett Parks, Blue
Austin Teter, Blue
4-H/FFA Dairy Cattle, Dairy
Were proud to support Anderson
Countys
rich agricultural tradition.
2×3
Congratulations
Leroy
Coop to the exhibitors!
785-242-5170
302 N. Main,
Ottawa, Ks
2×3
Garnett
Center
Congratulations to the
exhibitors in the 2024
Anderson County Fair!
Home
The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 19
Trax Vermillion with his pig.
Chase Sobba.
Mila Elliott.
Jaden Teter.
Mason Traul & Nora Traul.
Lyndsay Hughes with her horse.
2×3
Tom Adams
So proud of all your hard work. Come in and enjoy our
Weekly Specials!
110 W. 5th Garnett (785) 448-5856
Greyson Swanson.
20 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Showmanship, Senior Dairy
Showmanship
Taryn Morrow, Grand Champion,
Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Dairy Cattle, 4-H/FFA Dairy
Cattle, 2006: HOLSTEIN Senior Yearling
Heifer, born September 1 to November
30, 2018
Taryn Morrow, Grand Champion,
Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Breeding Goat,
01: Breeding Meat Goat, age 0-6 months
/ 01.01: Breeding Meat Goat, age 0-6
months – Show Class 1
Lenny Elliott, Blue
Brett Gilbreth, Blue
Lyndsay Hughes, Blue
Hank Newton, Blue
Jadyn Parks, 1, Grand Champion
Breeding Meat Doe, Blue
Rhett Parks, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Breeding Goat,
01: Breeding Meat Goat, age 0-6 months
/ 01.02: Breeding Meat Goat, age 0-6
months – Show Class 2
Kimora Coleman, Blue
Oakley Frobose, Blue
Talon Jasper, 2, Reserve Grand
Champion Breeding Meat Doe, Blue
Haylee Lanham, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Breeding Goat, 02:
Breeding Meat Goat, age 7-12 months
/ 02.01: Breeding Meat Goat, age 7-12
months – Show Class 1
Oakley Frobose, Blue
Haylee Lanham, 1, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Breeding Goat, 02:
Breeding Meat Goat, age 7-12 months
/ 02.02: Breeding Meat Goat, age 7-12
months – Show Class 2
Haylee Lanham, 2, Blue
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Breeding Goat, 02:
Breeding Meat Goat, age 7-12 months
/ 02.03: Breeding Meat Goat, age 7-12
2×3
6th Ave
months – Show Class 31
Jadyn Parks, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Blue
Mason Rockers, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Breeding Goat, 04:
Breeding Meat Goat, age 25 months and
older
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Anderson County Born and Raised
Kimora Coleman, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Blue
Elizabeth Ellington, Blue
Gracyn Ellington, Blue
Holden Firestone, Blue, 3
Brett Gilbreth, Blue
Lillain Hawkins, Blue
Claire Holloway, Blue
Lyndsay Hughes, Blue, 5
Talon Jasper, Blue, 2
Haylee Lanham, Blue
Haylee Lanham, Blue, 1
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue
Hank Newton, Blue, 4
Rhett Parks, Blue
Wyatt Robb, Blue
Zander Robb, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
Skylar Salazar, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Lightweight Market Meat Goat
Brantley Hill, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Market Meat Goat / 01: Market Meat
Goat – Show Class 1
Nora Cubit, Blue, 3, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Blue, 4, Blue
Lillain Hawkins, Blue, 6, Blue
Haylee Lanham, Blue, 1, Blue
Mason Rockers, Blue, 5, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue, 2, Blue
Huck Young, Blue, 7, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Market Meat Goat / 02: Market Meat
Goat – Show Class 2
Oakley Frobose, Blue, 3, Blue
Braden Gillespie, Purple, 1, Grand
Champion, Blue, 1, Blue
Tyler Gillespie, Blue, 2, Blue
Claire Holloway, Blue, 6, Blue
Lyndsay Hughes, Blue, 4, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Blue, 5, Blue
Zander Robb, Blue, 7, Blue
Huck Young, Blue, 8, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Market Meat Goat / Market Meat Goat
/ 03: Market Meat Goat – Show Class 3
Elizabeth Ellington, Blue, 3, Blue
Talon Jasper, Blue, 2, Blue
Talon Jasper, Blue, 5, Blue
Haylee Lanham, Purple, 2, Reserve
Grand Champion, Blue, 1, Blue
Rhett Parks, Rate of Gain, Blue, 4, Blue
Wyatt Robb, Blue, 6, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Market Meat Goat / 04: Market Meat
Goat – Show Class 4
Kimora Coleman, Blue, 3, Blue
Gracyn Ellington, Blue, 4, Blue
Braden Gillespie, Blue, 1, Blue
Rylee Hill, Blue, 5, Blue
Skylar Salazar, Blue, 2, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Market Meat Goat / 05: Market Meat
Goat – Show Class 5
Holden Firestone, Blue, 2, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue, 4, Blue
Taryn Morrow, Blue, 3, Blue
McKenna Powell, Blue, 5, Blue
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue, 1, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Market Goat,
Market Meat Goat / 06: Market Meat
Goat – Show Class 6
Anna Danner, Blue, 5, Blue
Brett Gilbreth, Blue, 4, Blue
Brynleigh Morrow, Rate of Gain, Blue, 6,
Blue
Hank Newton, Blue, 3, Blue
Jadyn Parks, Blue, 1, Blue
Rhett Parks, Blue, 2, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Meat Goat
Showmanship, 1: Senior Meat Goat
Showmanship
Anna Danner, Blue,
Elizabeth Ellington, Blue,
Congratulations to all the fair participants!
2×3
Leroy Coop
Arent you glad you used
Honor Show Feeds
LeRoy Kansas Toll Free 1-888-964-2225
Yates Center (620) 625-2271
Westphalia Toll Free 1-877-489-2521
Westphalia Tire Shop (785) 489-2216
Gridley (620) 836-2860
Visit our website at www.leroycoop.coop
2×3
Beachner Grain
The Winners Circle
Tyler Gillespie, Grand Champion, Blue, 1
Rylee Hill, Blue,
Talon Jasper, Blue,
Haylee Lanham, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, 2
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue,
Taryn Morrow, Blue,
Hank Newton, Blue,
Jadyn Parks, Blue, 3
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Meat Goat
Showmanship, 2: Intermediate Meat
Goat Showmanship
Aubrey Ellington, Blue
Gracyn Ellington, Blue
Braden Gillespie, Grand Champion, Blue,
1
Lillain Hawkins, Blue, 3
Lyndsay Hughes, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, 2
Rhett Parks, Blue
Brynlee Rockers, Blue
4-H/FFA Meat Goats, Meat Goat
Showmanship, 3: Junior Meat Goat
Showmanship
Nora Cubit, Blue
Lenny Elliott, Blue, 3
Oakley Frobose, Blue
Brett Gilbreth, Blue
Brantley Hill, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Blue, 2
Gwendolyn Wiehl, Blue, 1
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 01: Senior Buck
Shelby OConnor, Purple
Timber Vermillion, Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 01: Standard Breeds; Large
Fowl; One young bird of either sex
Rhett Cubit, Red
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 02: Cockerel, Standard Breed,
Large Fowl
Mary Rockers, Reserve Grand Champion,
Blue
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 02: Senior Doe
Shelby OConnor, Blue
Shelby OConnor, Blue
Timber Vermillion, Purple, Class
Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 03: Hen, Standard Breed,Large
Fowl
Rosalyn Brackett, Red
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 04: Pullet, Standard Breed,
Large Fowl
Brantley Hill, Blue, Clas Champion
Brantley Hill, Blue
Brantley Hill, Blue
Rylee Hill, Red
Rylee Hill, Red
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 05: Cocks, Standard Breed,
Bantams
Addilynn Reed, Red
Addilynn Reed, Blue
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 05: Junior Buck
Rhett Cubit, Blue
Timber Vermillion, Purple, Class
Reserve Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 06: Junior Doe
Nora Cubit, Blue
Timber Vermillion, Grand Champion,
Purple
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 07: Hen, Standard Breed,
Bantam
Nora Cubit, Red
Nora Cubit, Red, Reserve Champion
Mackinley Hill, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Grand Champion, Purple
Addilynn Reed, Purple
Addilynn Reed, Blue
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 09: Meat Pen
Timber Vermillion, Purple, Grand
Champion
Timber Vermillion, Red
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 10: Showmanship 14+
Timber Vermillion, Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 11: Showmanship 11-13
Thanks
4 H members and
2×3
parents
Leroy Coopfor rocking the
Anderson County Fair!
LANDSCAPE & DRIVEWAY ROCK MULCH SAND SOIL BOULDERS
(785) 242- 3070 3557 Old Highway 59 Ottawa
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 21
Shelby OConnor, Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 12: Showmanship 7-10
Rhett Cubit, Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 13: Ducks, all breeds
Rylee Hill, Blue
Shelby OConnor, Blue
Shelby OConnor, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Red
Addilynn Reed, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Blue
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 16: Showmanship Senior 14 +
Rylee Hill, Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 17: Showmanship Intermediate
11-13
Shelby OConnor, Purple, Reserve
Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 18: Showmanship Junior 7-10
Nora Cubit, Blue
Brantley Hill, Purple, Champion
Mackinley Hill, Blue
Addilynn Reed, Blue
Mary Rockers, Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 3456: Colored Rex Fur
Nora Cubit, Blue, Champion
Rhett Cubit, Purple, Champion
4-H/FFA Poultry & Rabbits, 4-H/FFA
Poultry, 3463: Showmanship (9-10 years
old)
Nora Cubit, Blue, Reserve Champion
4-H/FFA Sheep, Breeding Sheep, 802:
Spring Ewe Lamb / 802.01: Spring Ewe
Lamb – Show Class 1
Braden Gillespie, Reserve Grand
Champion Breeding Ewe, Blue, 1
Braden Gillespie, Blue, 2
Jadyn Parks, Blue
4-H/FFA Sheep, Breeding Sheep, 802:
Spring Ewe Lamb / 802.02: Spring Ewe
Lamb – Show Class 2
Tyler Gillespie, Blue
Jadyn Parks, Grand Champion Breeding
Ewe, Blue, 1
Rhett Parks, Blue, 2
4-H/FFA Sheep, Market Sheep,
Anderson County Born and Raised
Braden Gillespie, Blue, 2, Blue
Tyler Gillespie, Blue, 1, Blue
Brook Hughes, Blue, , Blue
Lyndsay Hughes, Blue, Blue
2×3
Anderson County
Farm Bureau
Congratulations!
DUTCH COUNTRY CAFE GARNETT (785) 448-5711
2×3
Anderson County
Farm Bureau
22 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue, Blue
Sage Partida, Blue, 3, Blue
Sayleen Partida, Blue, Blue
4-H/FFA Sheep, Market Sheep,
Crossbred / 01: Crossbred – Show Class
1
Emma Cubit, Blue, 3, Blue
Emma Cubit, Blue, 4 Blue
Braden Gillespie, Blue, 1 Reserve
Champion
Sayleen Partida, Blue, 2, Blue
4-H/FFA Sheep, Market Sheep,
Crossbred / 02: Crossbred – Show Class
2
Tyler Gillespie, Purple, 2, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, 1, Champion
Lillain Hawkins, Blue, 5, Blue
Brynleigh Morrow, Blue, 6, Blue
Hank Newton, Blue, 2, Blue
Jadyn Parks, Blue, 4, Blue
Rhett Parks, Blue, 3, Blue
4-H/FFA Sheep, Market Sheep,
Crossbred / Hampshire
Tyler
Braden Gillespie, Purple, 1, Grand
Champion, Blue, 1, Champion
Brook Hughes, Blue, 5, Blue
Brook Hughes, Blue, 6, Blue
Lyndsay Hughes, Blue, 3, Blue
Hank Newton, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion
Sage Partida, Rate of Gain, Blue, 4, Blue
4-H/FFA Sheep, Market Sheep, Natural
Tyler Gillespie, BLue, 1, Champion
4-H/FFA Sheep, Market Sheep, Speckled
Face
Jadyn Parks, Blue, 1, Champion
4-H/FFA Sheep, Sheep Showmanship, 1:
Senior Sheep Showmanship
Jadyn Parks, 1, Grand Champion
Tyler Gillespie, 2, Reserve Grand
Champion
4-H/FFA Sheep, Sheep Showmanship, 2:
Intermediate Sheep Showmanship
Braden Gillespie, Grand Champion, Blue
Lillain Hawkins, Blue
Lyndsay Hughes, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue
Rhett Parks, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine,
Crossbred / 01: Crossbred – Show Class
1
Maxwell Jimenez, Blue, 3, Blue
John Lynn, Blue, 5, Blue
John Lynn, Blue, 4, Blue
Sayleen Partida, Blue, 2, Blue
McKenna Powell, Blue, 7, Blue
Huck Young, Blue, 6, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine,
Crossbred / 02: Crossbred – Show Class
2
Kason Durand, Blue, 5, Blue
Braden Gillespie, Blue, 3, Blue
Tyler Gillespie, Purple, 2, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, 2, Reserve Champion
Talon Jasper, Purple, 1, Grand
Champion, Blue, 1, Champion
Hudson Powell, Blue, 6, Blue
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, 7, Blue
Britni Zook, Blue, 4, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine,
Crossbred / 03: Crossbred – Show Class
3
Emma Cubit, Blue, 4, Blue
Macy Cubit, Blue, 6, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue, 3, Blue
Hope Pracht, Blue, 2, Blue
Wyatt Sobba, Blue, 1, Blue
Huck Young, Blue, 5, Blue
Huck Young, Blue, 7, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine,
Crossbred / Crossbred / 04: Crossbred Show Class 4
Elizabeth Ellington, Blue, 4, Blue
Gunner Ellington, Blue, 3, Blue
Wyatt Robb, Blue, 2, Blue
Jaden Teter, Blue, 1, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine, Duroc
Rylie Davis, Blue, 2, Reserve Champion
Kyler McDaniel, Blue, 4, Blue
Mason Rockers, Blue, 5, Blue
Skylar Salazar, Blue, 1, Champion
Max Sims, Blue, 3, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine,
Hampshire / 01: Hampshire – Show
Class 1
Congratulations
to all our 4Hers for your
2×3
commitment
and dedication!
Maple
St. Liquor
Kason Durand, Blue, 1, Champion
Kyler McDaniel, Blue, 4
Hope Pracht, Blue, 2, Reserve Champion
Chase Sobba, Blue, 3, Blue
Jaden Teter, Blue, 5, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine,
Hampshire / 02: Hampshire – Show
Class
Gracyn Ellington, Blue, 1,
Nash Holloway, Blue, 2, Blue
Brook Hughes, Blue, 4, Blue
Zander Robb, Blue, 3, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine, Other
Breed
Colton Bennett, Blue, 3, Blue
Aubrey Ellington, Blue, 7, Blue
Brook Hughes, Blue, 5, Blue
Lucas Lizer, Blue, 6, Blue
Sage Partida, Blue, 1, Champion
Sienna Partida, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion
Mason Rockers, Blue, 4, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine, Spot
Annsley Adams, Blue, 4, Blue
Holden Firestone, Blue, 3, Blue
Sylah Partida, Blue, 1, Champion
Trax Vermillion, Blue, 2, Reserve
Champion
Truett Vermillion, Blue, 5, Blue
4-H/FFA Swine, Market Swine,
Yorkshire
Auvrie Adams, Blue, 5, Blue
Claire Holloway, Blue, 6, Blue
Eva Jimenez, Blue, 2, Reserve Champion
Lucas Lizer, Blue, 4, Blue
Myah Martin, Blue, 3, Blue
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, 1, Champion
Open-Baking, Cakes and Cupcakes, 17:
Bundt Cake, any flavor
Mary Crist, Red
Matt Egidy, Blue
Open-Baking, Cakes and Cupcakes, 16:
Cake, frosted, any flavor
Vivian Riblett, Blue, Reserve Champion
Open-Baking, Cookies – 3 on a plate, 21:
Chocolate Chip Cookies, 3 on a plate
Viola Beachy, White
Mary Crist, Red
Brandi Frobose, Blue
Open-Baking, Cookies – 3 on a plate, 22:
Peanut Butter Cookies, 3 on a plate
Mary Crist, White
Open-Baking, Cookies – 3 on a plate, 24:
Oatmeal Cookies, 3 on a plate
Karen Gillespie, Blue
Open-Baking, Cookies – 3 on a plate, 25:
Brownies, 3 on a plate
Mary Crist, Red
C o ngrat
u l at io n s
to all ou
2×6
f ai r e xh r
i bi t ors!
D&M Mini Barns
Take a little tip
about winter storage.
Solid construction with
dozens of sizes & styles.
313 S. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-2102
Stop by and tour our lot before winter hits.
(785) 504-9625 24751 N Highway 169, Garnett
www.dmminibarns.com
The Winners Circle
Open-Baking, Cookies – 3 on a plate, 26:
Bar Cookies, any kind not listed, 3 on
a plate
Mary Crist, Blue
Open-Baking, Cookies – 3 on a plate, 28:
Miscellaneous Cookies, 3 on a plate
Paula Sjorlund, Blue
Open-Baking, Cookies – 3 on a plate, 30:
Snickerdoodles, 3 on a plate
Brandi Frobose, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
43: Quick Bread, any type (zucchini,
banana, nut)
Erika Crist, Red
Mila Elliot, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
44: Muffins, 3 on a plate
Briar Barnes, Red
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
48a: Bundt Cake
Erika Crist, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
49: Trail Mix – 1 1/2 cups in a zip lock
bag
Mila Elliot, Red
Pacee Rockers, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
51: Peanut Butter Cookies, 3 on a plate
Erika Crist, Red
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
52: Snickerdoodle Cookies, 3 on a plate
Madison Holloway, Red
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
53: Chocolate Chip Cookies, 3 on a plate
Mila Elliott, Blue
Madison Holloway, White
Lucas Lizer, Red
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
54: Sugar Cookies, 3 on a plate
Natalie Lizer, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
56: Bar Cookies, any kind, 3 on a plate
Erika Crist, Red
Lucas Lizer, Blue
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
57: Brownies, 3 on a plate
Erika Crist, White
Mila Elliott, Blue
Natalie Lizer, Red
Open-Baking, Jr (10 Yrs or younger),
58: Oatmeal Cookies, 3 on a plate
Madison Holloway, Blue
Open-Baking, King Arthur Flour, 87:
King Arthur Flour Herb Bread
Cathy Allen, Blue, King Arthur Flour 1st
Krista Cubit, Red, King Arthur Flour 2nd
Gracie Moyer, White, King Arthur Flour
3rd
Open-Baking, Quick Breads, 09:
Banana, Nut, Zucchini
Mary Crist, Blue
Open-Baking, Teens (11 yrs – 18 yrs), 64:
Yeast Bread, any type
Britni Zook, Blue
Britni Zook, Blue
Open-Baking, Teens (11 yrs – 18 yrs),
67: Quick Bread, any type (zucchini,
banana, nut)
Xavier Crist, Blue
Open-Baking, Teens (11 yrs – 18 yrs), 68:
Muffins, 3 on a plate
Easton King, Blue
Open-Baking, Teens (11 yrs – 18 yrs), 74:
Drop Cookie, any kind, 3 on a plate
Xavier Crist, Red
Easton King, Blue
Open-Baking, Teens (11 yrs – 18 yrs), 75:
Bar Cookies, any kind, 3 on a plate
Xavier Crist, Red
Open-Baking, Teens (11 yrs – 18 yrs), 78:
Brownies, 3 on a plate
Xavier Crist, Red
Easton King, Blue
Open-Baking, Teens (11 yrs – 18 yrs), 82:
Trail Mix – 1 1/2 cups in a Ziploc bag
Xavier Crist, Blue
Open-Baking, Yeast Bread, 01: Loaf of
White of French
Krista Cubit, Red
Ruth Pracht, Blue
Open-Baking, Yeast Bread, 03: Dinner
Rolls, 3 on a plate
Krista Cubit, Blue
Open-Crafts, Adult Class, 03: Charcoal
or Pencil Drawing, mounted or framed
Joe Giardino, Grand Champion, Blue,
Class Champion
Joe Giardino, Red
Open-Crafts, Adult Class, 09: Jewelry,
any kind
Mary Crist, Blue
Open-Crafts, Adult Class, 12: Original
Handmade Greeting Card
Paula Sjorlund, Blue
Open-Crafts, Adult Class, 14:
Miscellaneous Craft Item
Mary Crist, Red
Judy Ryman, White
Paula Sjorlund, Blue
Open-Crafts, Adult Class, 15: Craft Not
Listed Above
Marlene Cook, Red
Paula Sjorlund, Blue
Open-Crafts, Adult Class, 16: Item made
from duct tape
Mary Crist, Red
Open-Crafts, Exhibitors Living in a
Care Facility, 46: Painted Article
Ruth Zwiener, Blue
Open-Crafts, Exhibitors Living in a
Care Facility, 48: Jewelry
Ruth Zwiener, Blue
Open-Crafts, Exhibitors Living in a
Care Facility, 49: Paper Craft
Ruth Zwiener, Blue
Open-Crafts, Exhibitors Living in a
Care Facility, 51: Recycled Craft Item
(explain craft)
Ruth Zwiener, Blue
Open-Crafts, Exhibitors Living in a
Care Facility, 52: Misc Craft Item
Ruth Zwiener, Blue
Open-Crafts, Exhibitors Living in a
Care Facility, 53: Craft Not Listed Above
Ruth Zwiener, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 19: Fun Foam
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 23
Art
Erika Crist, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 21: Decorated
Picture Frame, any kind
Jaron Ludolph, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 22: Paper
Craft, any kind
Erika Crist, Red
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 24: Painted
Clothing Item
Corbyn Bargmann, Red
Wesley Siemens, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 26: Lego
Designs
Rhett Cubit, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 27: Sun
Catchers
Erika Crist, Reserve Grand Champion,
Blue, Class Reserve Champion
Xavier Crist, Red
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 28:
Watercolor, mounted or framed
Whitton Jimieniez, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 29: Mixed
Media and Prints, mounted or framed
Corbyn Bargmann, Red
Wesley Siemens, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 36: Jewelry,
any kind
Erika Crist, Blue
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 38: Recycled
Craft Item (explain craft)
Mila Elliott, Blue
Easton King, Red
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 39:
Miscellaneous Craft Item
Corbyn Bargmann, Red
Elizabeth Ellington, Blue
Wesley Siemens, White
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 40: Craft Not
Listed Above
Mila Elliott, Red
Easton King, Blue
Levi Siemens, White
Open-Crafts, Youth Class, 43: Item made
from duct tape
Xavier Crist, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 08: Corn, 10 ears (any color)
Jadyn Parks, White
Rhett Parks, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 10: Soybeans, bundle four inches
Lawson Holloway, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 11: Corn, longest single ear
Lawson Holloway, Red
Great
work!
Congratulations to all the
exhibitors at this years
Anderson County Fair.
Garnett Gardner Princeton
Ottawa Lake Ozark
www.patriotsbank.com
24 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Rhett Parks, Blue
Austin Teter, White
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 12: Corn, Best Single Ear
Lawson Holloway, Blue
Rhett Parks, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 13: Corn stalk, tallest with ear
of corn
Rhett Parks, Blue
Austin Teter, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 14: Popcorn, 10 ears (any color)
Lori Stottlemire, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 23: Jalapeno Peppers, five
Viola Beachy, Red
Leanna DeVoe, White
Robert Miller, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 24: Chili Peppers, five
Viola Beachy, Red
Viola Beachy, Blue
Vincent Hamilton, Red
Robert Miller, White
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 24: Banana Peppers, five
Robert Miller, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 27: Peppers, collection of six
with three different named varieties
Robert Miller, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 28: Garlic Bulbs, five
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 33: Red Potatoes, five
Marlene Cook, White
Robert Miller, Blue
Mary Ann Umbarger, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 34: White Potatoes, five
Viola Beachy, Red
Marlene Cook, White
Robert Miller, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 36: Sweet Corn, five
2×3
Garnett
Center
Viola Beachy, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 37: Red Tomatoes, five
Robert Miller, Grand Champion, Blue,
Class Champion
Mary Ann Umbarger, Red, Reserve
Champion
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 39: Yellow Tomatoes, five
Krista Cubit, Red
Nora Cubit, Blue
Mary Ann Umbarger, White
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 40: Salad Tomatoes, five
Ally Duke, Red
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 43: Cucumbers, five
Robert Miller, Blue
Mary Ann Umbarger, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 44: Okra, five
Leanna DeVoe, White
Natalie Lizer, Red
Robert Miller, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 46: Beets, five
Viola Beachy, Red
Vincent Hamilton, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 47: Green Beans, ten pods
Robert Miller, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 53: Unusual Vegetable in size
or shape
Marlene Cook, Blue
Ally Duke, White
Dalton Duke, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 57: Summer Squash
Rhett Cubit, Blue
Natalie Lizer, Red
Robert Miller, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 58: Winter Squash
Lori Stottlemire, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Home
Unique Wedding Items Gifts Decor Antique furniture at very
reasonable prices 3 full floors of merchandise
121 E. 4th Street, Garnett, Ks. (785) 418-1060 (785) 418-1508
Open Tues-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed Sun. & Mon.
Classes, 64: Other Apples, five
Lawrence Comfort, Blue
Natalie Lizer, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 66: Pears, five
Natalie Lizer, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 69: Grapes, ten
Ally Duke, Blue
Dalton Duke, White
Mary Ann Umbarger, Red
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 71: Gourds, assortment of 3-5
gourds
Lori Stottlemire, Blue
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 76: Garden Display, 5-7 items
grown by exhibitor
Krista Cubit, Grand Champion, Blue,
Class Champion
Open-Farm, Orchard, Garden Garden
Classes, 80: Comb Honey
Curtis Umbarger, Red
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Applique,
Cut Work, Tatting Classes, 25:
Appliqued Article
Judy Ryman, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
Crocheting Classes, 09: Crocheted
Afghan – any design
Viola Beachy, Red
Mary Crist, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
Crocheting Classes, 18: Crocheted Table
Covern
Viola Beachy, Red
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
Crocheting Classes, 19: Crocheted Pot
Holder
Viola Beachy, Red
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
Crocheting Classes, 22: Crocheted
Miscellaneous article or item
Viola Beachy, Red
Viola Beachy, Green
Deborah Lucas, Blue
Deborah Lucas, White
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
Embroidery Classes, 23: Embroidery,
Pillow Case
Viola Beachy, Green
Viola Beachy, White
Leanna DeVoe, Red
Leanna DeVoe, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
ATTENTION LIVESTOCK GROWERS
Moran Locker would like for you to compare processing prices and capabilities. Your hand raised livestock, at our facility, is cut to your specifications
2×6
to fit your
needs. All of your steaks and roasts are wrapped using our new
Thermoforming
wrapping.
Allowing you to age beef in your refrigerator
Moran
Locker
for up to 30 days while still sealed. We are locally owned and operated, a
business with the knowledge and experience of 4 generations of meat processing and butchering. Keeping our prices as low as possible for over 35
years, you need to know where to go for the highest quality of processing
and slaughter at the lowest prices. Moran Locker, where you get the quality
of processing at the lowest price
you deserve. Always updating
and improving our equipment to better suite
your needs. Keeping
a clean Facility with
full inspection and
processing to ensure
your hard work and
investment.
Owners, Mitch
& Sharon Bolling
State inspected slaughtering,
processing & curing.
Hwy 59 South Downtown Moran
(620) 237-4331 or hm (620) 939-4800
The Winners Circle
Embroidery Classes, 24: Cross Stitch,
any article
Marlene Cook, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Hooked
Classes, 50: Wall Hanging
Joleata Kent, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Junior
Classes (15 Yrs or younger), 62: Pillow
Easton King, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Junior
Classes (15 Yrs or younger), 68: Knitted
Article
Erika Crist, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Knitting
Classes, 01: Knitted Afghan – any design
Viola Beachy, White
Leanna DeVoe, Red
Leanna DeVoe, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Knitting
Classes, 02: Knitted Sweater (girl,boy or
adult)
Judy Ryman, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Knitting
Classes, 04: Knitted Scarf
Mary Crist, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Knitting
Classes, 08: Knitted Miscellaneous
Judy Ryman, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
Miscellaneous Item Classes, 57: Simple
Quilt
Marlene Cook, Grand Champion, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles,
Miscellaneous Item Classes, 61: Fabric
Item not mentioned
Elizabeth Oliver, Red
Elizabeth Oliver, Blue
Open-Fiber Arts and Textiles, Rug
Classes, 43: Crocheted Rug
Deb McMahon, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Annual Collections,
32: Zinnia, 5 Large
Krista Cubit, Blue
Terrie Gifford, Red
Open-Florticulture, Annual Collections,
33: Zinnia, 5 Medium
Krista Cubit, White
Terrie Gifford, Red
Connie Rockers, Blue, Class Champion
Open-Florticulture, Annual Collections,
33: Zinnia, 5 Small
Terrie Gifford, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Annual Collections,
36: Marigold, 5 Medium
Donna Fernandez, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Annual Collections,
37: Marigold, 5 Small
Diana Hastert, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Annuals, 31:
Annual Not Listed
Dave Branton, Red
Veronica Branton, White
Connie Rockers, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design Designer Choice, 44: Company Comin
– Informal Luncheon
Mary Cubit, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design Designer Choice, 47: Green Thumb – All
green
Lori Stottlemire, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design
– Designer Choice, 48: Design Using
Antique Container
Diane Hastert, Blue
Connie Rockers, Red
Lori Stottlemire, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design Designer Choice, 49: Kansas the Grain
State
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design
– Designer Choice, 50: Good ol
Summertime
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design Designer Choice, 51: Anything Goes
Dave Blanton, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design
– Designer Choice, 52: Small Wonders small design not over eight inches
Diane Hastert, Red
Connie Rockers, Blue
2024 ANDERSON COUNTY FAIR
2×3
Valley R
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 25
Mary Ann Umbarger, White
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design
– Designer Choice, 53: Small Wonders miniature not over five inches
Connie Rockers, Red
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Artistic Design
– Designer Choice, 54: Wild Flower
Arrangement
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Flower Collections,
38: Wild Flowers, 5
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Flower Collections,
39: Annual Flowers not listed, 5
Krista Cubit, Blue
Mary Cubit, Red
Open-Florticulture, Flower Collections,
40: Perennial Flowers not listed, 5
Krista Cubit, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Hybrid Tea Roses,
One Stem, 10: Red
Ally Duke, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Hybrid Tea Roses,
One Stem, 12: Pink
Ally Duke, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Hybrid Tea Roses,
One Stem, 14: Two-Toned
Ally Duke, Red
Open-Florticulture, Hybrid Tea Roses,
One Stem, 15: Any Other Color
Ally Duke, Blue, Class Champion
Open-Florticulture, Jr (16 Yrs or younger) – horticulture specimens must be
grown by exhibitor, 67: Zinnia, 5 Large
Natalie Lizer, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Potted Plants, 56:
Foilage Plants
Viola Beachy, Blue
Viola Beachy, Red
2×3
Cornstock
Congratulations to all participants
2x3of the Anderson County Fair!
Pizza Hut
405 N. Maple
(785) 448-3465
Dine-In, Carryout & Delivery
Order Online at pizzahut.com
26 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
Open-Florticulture, Potted Plants, 57:
Indoor Vining Plants
Viola Beachy, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Potted Plants, 58:
Planter – more than one plant
Krista Cubit, Blue
Open-Florticulture, Potted Plants, 60:
Succulents
Krista Cubit, Blue, Class Champion
Open-Florticulture, Potted Plants, 62
Any Plant not listed
Diane Hastert, Blue
Krista Cubit, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Canned FruitWater Bath Method, 04: Cherries
Hank Newton, Blue
Open-Food Preservation, Canned FruitWater Bath Method, 05: Peaches
Michelle Miller, Blue
Open-Food Preservation, Canned FruitWater Bath Method, 09: Miscellaneous
Fruit, not listed
Mary Ann Umbarger, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Canned
Vegetables-Pressure Canner Method, 48:
Beans, wax or green
Robert Miller, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Canned
Vegetables-Pressure Canner Method, 49:
Beets
Chuck Loewe, White
Open-Food Preservation, Canned
Vegetables-Pressure Canner Method, 55:
Miscellaneous Vegetables
Robert Miller, White
Open-Food Preservation, Dried Foods,
67: Dried Herbs
Krista Cubit, White
Curtis Umbarger, Blue, Class Reserve
Champion
Mary Ann Umbarger, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Jams or
Butters-Water Bath Method, 26: Peach
Jam
Krista Cubit, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Jams or
Butters-Water Bath Method, 28:
Miscellaneous Fruit Jam, not listed
Michelle Miller, White
Hank Newton, Blue, Class Champion
Curtis Umbarger, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 35:
Cucumber, sweet
Terrie Gifford, Blue
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 36:
Cucumber, dill
Michelle Miller, Red
Robert Miller, White
Emily Stephens, Blue
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 38:
Cucumber Relish
Mary Ann Umbarger, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 39: Corn
Relish
Hank Newton, Red
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 40:
Pickled Beets
Michelle Miller, Red
Mary Ann Umbarger, Blue
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 41:
Pickled Okra
Michelle Miller, White
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 42:
Pickled Vegetables of any kind
Robert Miller, White
Open-Food Preservation, Pickles and
Relishes-Water Bath Method, 46:
Miscellaneous Pickle Product
Michelle Miller, White
Krista Cubit, Red
Open-Horse, Halter, 102: Stock Type
Yearling – 2 year old gelding
Greyson Swanson, Blue
Open-Horse, Halter, Pole Bending
Greyson Swanson, Blue
Open-Horse, Halter, Barrel Racing
Greyson Swanson, Blue
2×3
Benjamin Realty
Open-Photography, Photography, 01:
Portrait
Mila Elliot, Red
Karlyn Hulett, Blue
Open-Photography, Photography, 02:
Nature
Mila Elliot, Red
Baylee Barnes, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, Class Reserve
Champion
Erika Crist, Red
Mila Elliott, White
Open-Photography, Photography, 03:
Humorous
Viola Beachy, Red
Mary Crist, Blue
Vincent Hamilton, White
Open-Photography, Photography, 04:
Animal
Mary Crist, Red
Mila Elliott, White
Deborah Lucas, Blue
Open-Photography, Photography, 05:
Farm Theme
Erika Crist, Blue
Xavier Crist, Red
Elaine Holloway, White
2×3
PSI
(620) 365-6908
Iola, KS
Open-Photography, Photography, 06:
Vacation Memories
Mila Elliott, White
Karlyn Hulett, Red
Denise King, Blue
Open-Photography, Photography, 07:
Miscellaneous Composition
Cathy Allen, Red
Mila Elliott, White
Lori Stottlemire, Blue
Open-Photography, Photography, 08:
Photo Story
Mila Elliott, Blue
Vincent Hamilton, Red
Open-Photography, Photography, 10:
Digital Manipulated Photo
Mila Elliot, Blue
Open-Photography, Photography, 11:
Special Photos of Anderson County Fun for the whole herd
Mila Elliott, Red
Blaine King, Grand Champion, Blue,
Class Champion
Judy Ryman, White
Open-Photography, Photography, 12:
Local Conservation Photo Contest – 18
and under
PSI
Insurance
Commercial Farm
Life Auto Crop
(620) 237-4631
Moran, KS
2×3
Jammin Nutrition
(913) 837-7825
Mound City, KS
The Winners Circle
Erika Crist, White
Xavier Crist, Red
Open-Poultry, Chickens, 201: Bantams
Cock, hatched prior to Jan. 1 of current
year
RaeLynn Reed, Blue
Open-Poultry, Chickens, 203: Bantams
Hen, hatched prior to Jan. 1 of current
year
RaeLynn Reed, Blue, Grand Champion
RaeLynn Reed, Red
Open-Poultry, Other Poultry, 707: Ducks
Male (tom, drake, gander or cock) one
year or older
RaeLynn Reed, Blue, Grand Champion
Open-Poultry, Other Poultry, 709: Ducks
Female (hen or goose) one year or older
RaeLynn Reed, Blue
Open-Quilts, Hand Quilted-One Person,
14B: Wall Quilt (any size) (14B)
Terrie Gifford, Red
Judy McGraw, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, Class Reserve
Champion
Open-Quilts, Hand Quilted-One Person,
08B: Paper Piece Quilt, any size
Judy McGraw, Grand Champion, Blue,
Class Champion
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-More
Than One Person, 25A: Original Picture
or Design
Joyce Buckley, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, Class Reserve
Champion
Marlene Cook, White
Donna Sutton, Red
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-More
Than One Person, 31A: Piecework
Shirley Allen, Red
Martha Miller, White
Sharon Rich, Grand Champion, Blue,
Class Champion
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-More
Than One Person, 35A: Pre-Printed
Fabric Quilt
Bonnie Deiter, Red
Brenda Futrell, Blue
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-More
Than One Person, 36A: Other Quilt
Than Classified (36A)
Lynn Sutherland, White
Donna Sutton, Red
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-More
Than One Person, 39A: Crib or Carriage
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024 27
Quilt (45×60 inch maximum)
Theis Ruth, Blue
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-More
Than One Person, 47A: Any Quilted
Article of Clothing
Elizabeth Oliver, Red
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-One
Person, 07A: Piecework
Bonnie Dieter, Red
Sharon Rich, Blue
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-One
Person, 10A: Holiday Quilt, any size
Bonnie Dieter, Blue
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-One
Person, 14A: Wall Quilt (any size)
Bonnie Dieter, Red
Terrie Gifford, Blue
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-One
Person, 16A: Quilted Tablecloth
Terrie Gifford, Red
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-One
Person, 17A: Quilted Table Runner and/
or Topper
Joyce Buckley, Red
Bonnie Deiter, Blue
Terrie Gifford, White
Open-Quilts, Machine Quilted-One
Person, 22A: Miscellaneous Quilted
Articles
Bonnie Deiter, Red
Open-Quilts, Quilt Block Contest,
Anderson County Fair Quilt Block
Contest
Cathy Allen, Blue
Nora Cubit, Blue, Reserve Champion
Terrie Gifford, Blue
Connie Hatch, Reserve Grand
Champion, Blue, Reserve Champion
Margaret Keen, Blue
Shelby OConnor, Blue
Sawyer Stevenson, Blue, Champion
Jeanette Stinebaugh, Grand Champion
Blue, Champion
PeeWee – Livestock, Bucket Calf, Bucket
Calf
Kallie Durand, Blue
Mila Elliott, Blue
Jessa Ivy, Blue
PeeWee – Livestock, Meat Goat, Meat
Goat
Mila Elliott, Blue
RaeLynn Reed, Blue
Congratulations to all the exhibitors in
The Anderson County Fair!
4×6 Baumans Carpet
Thank you for 59 years of your trust and confidence.
FURNITURE APPLIANCES
FLOORING
28 The Winners Circle
Special to The Anderson County Review – September 12, 2024
4×12
Garnett Family Dental

