Anderson County Review — September 13, 2016
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 13, 2016. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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Contents Copyright 2016 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
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day for Colony Day.
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See page 1B.
See pages 4-7B.
SEPTEMBER 13, 2016
See page 2B.
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Greeley
Car chase
Smokeoff
ends in wreck
Busy city streets set
stage for chase; ends
with intersection wreck
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A man apparently dressed as a woman sped
through the streets of Garnett
Saturday morning, pursued by
law enforcement from multiple
counties during an event in the
city considered to be one of the
busiest days of the year.
The car chase began in
Osage County, when an officer checked the tag of a blue
compact car and it came back
stolen. The chase entered
Anderson County and Garnett
on K-31 at about 11:30 a.m.
Saturday, Sept. 10.
City streets were particularly busy at the time because
of the Fall Citywide Garage
Sales event that day. The pursuit sped through several city
streets with speeds as high as
50 mph at times, according to
Garnett Police Chief Kevin
Pekarek.
As the car was headed toward Garnett, a city
police officer attempted to
deploy stop sticks at the
Pottawatomie Creek Bridge
on K-31 west of Garnett, well
before the vehicle would have
entered the city limits. As
the officer was attempting to
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Vickie Moss
SEE CHASE ON PAGE 3A
Mark Hoskins samples some ribs as David Rhine prepares them for a
contest entry at the Greeley Smokeoff Saturday, Sept. 10. Their team was
Royal Smoke, of Paola.
New alert system
warns of burn bans
System will send alert
when county declares
no burning conditions
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Landowners who
want to burn their fields and
pastures have a new resource
to check whether such action is
legally allowed.
The Anderson County
Rural Fire and Emergency
Management
last
week
announced a new program that
will provide telephone status
alerts when a burn ban is
in effect. Alerts also will be
provided when a burn ban is
lifted, Anderson County Fire
Coordinator Mick Brinkmeyer
said.
The system does not replace
the need to call and obtain a
burn permit before conducting a burn, though. Anyone
in Anderson County and the
City of Garnett who wants to
conduct a burn is required to
call the dispatch office at (785)
448-6823 and obtain a permit. If
the county is under a burn ban,
dispatchers will not issue the
permit. Anyone conducting a
burn without a permit can be
cited and fined.
The system will save time
by issuing the alert so that
someone considering a burn
will know ahead of time if it
isnt allowed, Anderson County
Emergency
Management
Director JD Mersman said.
Several other counties in
Kansas have used the system
and reported good results,
Mersman said.
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – If you have a
habit of texting while driving
or speeding, local law enforcement officers will be looking
for you.
A multi-state, targeted traffic enforcement effort will
focus on texting and driving,
as well as speeding, on highways, streets and county roads
between Sept. 23 and 25. The
Anderson County Sheriffs
Above, Jason Allen and Randy Reeves of
Good Times Smokers of Gardner rub seasoning onto their meat.
Above, Rita Reeves and
Amy Locke of Good Times
Smokers of Gardner prepare
an entry for the ribs contest.
At right, the Greeley Fire
Department serves lunch.
SEE ALERT ON PAGE 3A
Effort targets texting
and driving, speeding
Law enforcement will
be even more alert for
all traffic violations
Above, top: Ryder Hermreck of Spring Hill
swings over a very muddy pit. Heavy rains
made the ground a soggy mess at the
Smokeoff.
Department is expected to join
other law enforcement agencies
from Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska,
Arkansas, Missouri and
Oklahoma, Anderson County
Sheriff Vernon Valentine
announced last week.
A press release from
Valentine called texting and
driving an epidemic over
the past several years, which
led to the enforcement effort.
Officers will be extra vigilant
on patrol, Valentine said in the
press release.
Speeding increases the
severity of crashes and can
lead to serious injury or death.
Its important to warn drivers
SEE TRAFFIC ON PAGE 3A
Complaint filed against USD 365 on secret meetings
Government geek
not satisfied by boards
response to concerns
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A Garnett man
who has taken USD 365 board
members to task over open
meetings laws filed a complaint
with the state attorney generals office last week, in hopes
of making changes to the way
the school board handles secret
meetings.
Jason Sheahan, a citizen
who regularly attends school
board meetings, said he wants
USD 365 board members to
change their procedures and
receive training on the Kansas
Open Meetings Act (KOMA).
He complained about the way
the board introduces executive sessions, secret meetings
that are allowed but only under
very specific rules.
Sheahan said the board does
not properly follow KOMA
before it goes into secret session. A legal expert who represents Kansas newspapers
told The Review last week that
Sheahans concerns were 100
percent right.
But USD 365 Superintendent
Don Blome said the board
follows proper protocol. The
school boards attorney attended a Sept. 1 meeting and told
board members they were
technically correct in their
procedures, and provided educational material about KOMA
and suggested they make some
changes.
Sheahan was not satisfied
with the boards response and
filed a complaint with the
Kansas Attorney General on
Sept. 7.
Laws regarding open meetings and open records are
clearly spelled out by state statute, but violations are common
and often unintentional.
Max Kautsch, a Lawrence
attorney who specalizes in First
Amendment rights and open
government laws, represents
news media and is the legal
hotline attorney for the Kansas
Press Association (KPA) and
the Kansas Association of
SEE MEETINGS ON PAGE 3A
Custom printed MAGNETIC SIGNS – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SENIOR CENTER EVENT
Garnett Senior Center, 128 W.
5th Ave., Garnett, will have
a birthday celebration and
entertainment at 11:30 a.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 14. Musical
entertainment by Martin Honn
& Friends. Anyone 60 or older
is welcome. If youd like to eat
lunch please call in advance
448-6996 to reserve your meal,
$3 or a donation.
POLITICAL FORUM
Anderson County Farm Bureau,
Garnett Rotary and the Garnett
Business and Professional
Women (BPW) will be hosting
a Political Forum, Thursday,
September 15 at the Anderson
County High School Auditorium
at 7:00 p.m. There will be a
meet and greet at 6:30 p.m.
prior to the forum. About a
dozen local and state candidates are planned to attend.
Everyone is welcome.
VOTE OUT JUDGES MEETING
The
Anderson
County
Republican Party will sponsor an open public meeting at
7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 20, at
AuBurn Pharmacy Corporates
board room, entitled Better
Judges For Kansas, to discuss
means and motivations for voting against retention of Kansas
Supreme Court Justices in the
November election.
CHRISTMAS PARADE INFO
The Garnett Area Chamber of
Commercie is accepting Grand
Marshall nominations until 5
p.m. Oct. 28. Submit online or at
the office. www.chamberofgarnettks.com/christmas-parade.
html
HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE
The Garnett BPW is looking
for vendors to register for the
groups Holiday Boutique from
noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4
at the Kirk House, in conjunction
with the Garnett Library Homes
Tour. For more information or to
register, contact Helen Norman
at (785) 448-3826. Proceeds
help fund the BPW scholarship
program.
CELEBRATE RECOVERY
Celebrate Recovery, a Biblebased Christ-centered recovery
program for those who struggle with lifes hurts, habits and
hang-ups, meets each Monday
evening at the Garnett Church
of the Nazarene. It begins at 6
p.m. with meal and fellowship,
followed by worship service and
small groups until 8:30 p.m.
Childcare is provided. Recovery
is for a variety of lifes hurts, not
just those with alcohol or drug
problems. Call (785) 433-3118
for information.
SUICIDE AWARENESS GROUP
A new group, SAM – Suicide
Awareness Members, a division of SASS-MoKan – meets on
the first Thursday of the month
from 6:30-7:30 at the Garnett
Library located at 125 W 4th
Ave in Garnett. This group is
for family and friends who have
lost a loved one to suicide.
All are welcome to attend. The
facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols,
who may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month at Park
Plaza North Club House, 105
Park Plaza North, Garnett. For
more information, call Phyllis
at ECKAAA, (800) 633-5621 or
(785) 242-7200.
HELP FOR ANIMALS
Anyone willing to donate kitty
litter, canned dog food or
canned cat food, dog and cat
toys, paper towels, laundry and
cleaning supplies, or newspaper to help support Prairie Paws
Animal Shelter can contact Lisa
at (785) 204-2148.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
LOCAL
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS AUGUST 29
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on August 29, 2016 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
met with the commission. They
are still waiting on the crane for
the new shop. Dan Harden and
Jason Hoskinson, BG Consultants
joined the meeting. Dan introduced Jason to the commission.
Treasurer
Dena McDaniel, Treasurer met
with the commission. She talked
to the commission about an extra
$.50 per hour for her employees
who do drivers licenses as they
have to have KBI clearance to
process drivers licenses.
County Wide Cleanup
Commissioner
Highberger
moved to approve September 12
to the 16th as county wide clean
up week. Commissioner McGhee
seconded. Approved 30.
Emergency Management
JD Mersman, Emergency
Management Director met with the
commission. He reported there
was a severe storm Wednesday
night that did considerable damage to his vehicle. The side
window was blown out which also
caused his laptop to get damaged.
Insurance claim will be filed.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
September 2, Joseph J.
Dougherty and Rachel M.
Dougherty To Dennis C. Landwehr
Jr. Lot 10 In Block 41 In The City
Of Greeley.
September 6, Angela S. Betts
To Steven A. Baumann And Tiffany
Jean Baumann Lot 6 Troyer
Addition To City Of Garnett.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
September 6, Josh J. Mueller
vs. Julie A. Mueller, divorce granted.
September 7, Kurt Jay Rogers
vs. Rhonda Anne Rogers, divorce
granted.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
September 2, Michael Brandon
Ashurst and Kaci Irene Benjamin.
September 7, Atlee E. Stutzman
and Sarah Mae Kemp.
CIVIL CASES FILED
September 2, Caleb Jude
Foltz vs. Kansas Department of
Revenue, Gregory J. Weber, and
Justin A. Weber, asking for quiet
title to 1997 Chevrolet ton pickup.
September 7, City of Greeley
vs. Brian K. Hall, asking $676.13
plus interests and costs.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
September 2, Kyle L. Oswald
vs. Cory Wayne Denny and
Chandra Dewitt, asking eviction
and restitution for past rent and
damages to property, $869 plus
costs and interest.
September
2,
Portfolio
Recovery Associates, LLC. vs.
Steven L. Her, asking $1,661.14
costs.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
City of Garnett vs. Regine A.
Hurlock, default judgment for
$113.70 plus interest and court
costs.
Saint Lukes Health System,
Inc. vs. Sonya McCarthy, default
judgment for $10,039.51.
Bobs Supersaver dba Country
Mart Garnett vs. Jeff Garcia,
defendant appeared, confessed
judgment, judgment granted for
$2,118.15 plus interest and court
costs.
Victor Sigg, operating vehicle without liability insurance, dismissed.
Joshua A. Bruce, giving a
worthless check, guilty plea, $203
fine.
Carl Joseph Feuerborn, driving under the influence of drugs/
alcohol; 2nd conviction, guilty plea
$1,953 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On July 12, a report of driving
under the influence and failure to
report an accident with damage in
the vicinity of Second Street and
Oak.
On July 30, a report of burglary, vehicle or other means and
theft of property/services in the
200 block of East Fourth Avenue.
Reported damaged was a 1997
Ford truck, valued at $200 and
reported stolen was a car battery
valued at $110.
On September 1, a report of
driving while suspended in the
200 block of West Sixth Avenue.
On September 2, a report of
vehicle; unlawful acts; e.g. registration in the 400 block of South
Maple Street.
On September 3, a report of
use/possession of drug paraphernalia and transporting an open
container in the 600 block of North
Maple Street. Seized were an
open beer and a glass pipe with
residue.
On September 3, a report of
theft of property/services and
interference with law enforcement
officer in the 300 block of West 9th
Avenue. Reported stolen were a
Crucianelli accordion valued at
$100 and an American flag with
shell casings valued at $30. All
was recovered on September 3.
On September 5, a report of
driving under the influence; second conviction and driving while
suspended; second or subsequent conviction in the 420 block
of South Maple Avenue.
On September 5, a report of
pedestrians under the influence
of drugs in the 400 block of South
Pine.
On September 5, a report of
distributing certain hallucinogens
and use or possession of paraphernalia, lack of vehicle liability
insurance, failure to wear seat
belt, and no drug tax stamp in the
area of 24000 Louisiana Road.
Reported seized were a Fuzion
digital scale, 37 baggies for distribution, 10 smoking apparatus
packages, blue Tupperware container, two bank slips, and a baggie containing green leafy substance.
On September 5, a report of
driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs and failure to yield at
stop or yield sign in the 400 block
of South Olive Street.
Arrests
On September 1, Abby Leblanc,
Garnett, on suspicion of permitting
unauthorized minor to drive.
On September 1, Andy
Holleman, Garnett, on suspicion
of driving while suspended.
On September 2, Michael
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ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Accidents
On August 24, a vehicle driven
by Kyle Joseph Hohendorf, 30,
Prairie Village drove into the ditch
while heading westbound on 2200
road, after failing to turn, damaging a 10 foot wooden fence.
Driver was injured and taken to
the Anderson County Hospital by
ambulance.
On August 30, a vehicle driven by Charlene Ann Grau, 60,
Fredonia, struck a vehicle driven
by Drift Edward Daves Jr., 40,
Ethel, Louisiana, both heading
north on US Highway 169, when
the second vehicle made a left
hand turn into a private drive.
Daves was injured and taken to
Anderson County Hospital by
ambulance.
On September 1, a vehicle driven by Hannah May Teter, 28,
Garnett, was struck at the left
wheel/fender area, by a vehicle
driven by Carlbert Lee Brown,
59, Houston, Texas, while turning
west from US 59 Highway onto
1980 Road when Brown tried to
pass. Passengers in Teters vehicle were Brandon Lee Cearnal,
30, Garnett, and Mark Bentley, 3,
Garnett. Kyleson Bert Brown, 30,
Houston, Texas, was a passenger
in Browns vehicle. Teters vehicle was spun to face north, and
Browns vehicle turned sideways,
crossed center, and rolled over
360 degrees. Neither drivers, nor
passengers, were injured.
On September 2, a vehicle driv-
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en by Brian G. Miller, 18, Garnett,
struck a deer when going around
a curve on Northwest Maryland
road.
On September 6, a vehicle driven by Norman R. Dix, 46, Ottawa,
struck a deer while traveling West
on 800 road by Norton Road.
Incidents
On March 16, a report of burglary and theft in the area of
24700 north US 169. Reported
stolen were a 40 inch color television, valued at $800, a laptop
computer, valued at $500, and an
internet cable box, valued at $100.
On August 25, a report of aggravated burglary and theft of property in the area of 28300 Northeast
2400 Road, Greeley. Reported
missing was a 46 inch flat screen
television, valued at $600, a portable radio, valued at $30, and a
gold wrist watch, valued at $9.
JAIL BOOKINGS
On September 1, Justin
Christopher White, Topeka, 40,
was booked into jail by Douglas
County Sheriff on suspicion of
probation violation. Bond set at
$5,000. Released September 6.
On September 1, Steven
Mathew Archuleta, Lawrence, 24,
was booked into jail by Douglas
County Sheriff for failure to
appear, cash bond set at $310,
contempt of court, bond set at
$3,000, and on suspicion of distribution of opiate/narcotics, bond
set at $10,000.
On September 1, Ryan Patrick
Clark, Lawrence, 29, was booked
into jail by Douglas County Sheriff
for failure to appear, cash bond
set at $1,920.50, on suspicion of
criminal use of financial card without consent, bond set at $10,000,
on suspicion of aggravated burglary, bond set at $10,000, on
suspicion of theft; felony, no bond
set, on suspicion of possession
of stolen property, no bond set,
on suspicion of criminal damage
to property, no bond set, on suspicion of criminal use of financial
card, no bond set and on suspicion of criminal use of financial
card, bond set at $10,000.
On September 1, Dawn Marie
Smith, Quenemo, 20 was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriff for failure to appear. Bond
set at $10,000.
On September 1, Shannen
Leeviy Price, Osage, 36, was
booked into jail by Franklin Sheriff
on suspicion of battery. Bond set
at $50,000.
On September 1, Andy Wayne
Holleman, Garnett, 41, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of driving while suspended. Bond set at
$1,000. Released September 1.
On September 2, Stephen
Samuel Lowery, Garnett, 39, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department for a 5 day writ. NonBondable. Released September
7.
On September 3, Richard
Eugene Vandenberg, Kansas City,
47, was booked into jail by Garnett
Police Department for failure to
appear, bond set at $500, and
on suspicion of transporting an
open container, bond set at $250.
Released September 3.
On September 3, Michael Paul
Watts, Colony, 42, was booked into
jail by Garnett Police Department
on suspicion of no proof of vehicle
liability insurance, no bond set,
and suspicion of use/possession
of drug paraphernalia, bond set at
$900. Released September 3.
On September 3, James
Lawrence Trusty, Garnett, 53, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of theft,
bond set at $1,000, and suspicion
of interference with law enforcement officer, bond set at $500.
Released September 4.
On September 5, Koti Ray
Garber, Quenemo, 33, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of driving under the influence; second
conviction, bond set at $2,500 and
driving while suspended, third of
subsequent conviction, bond set
at $1,000. Released September
5.
On September 5, Tori Leigh
Votter, Halstead, 22, was booked
into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of
pedestrians under the influence
of alcohol or drugs, bond set at
$250. Released September 6.
On September 5, Asa Thomas
Young, Arkansas City, 20, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriff on suspicion of
distributing marijuana, bond set at
$750, on suspicion of no drug tax
stamp for marijuana, no bond set,
on suspicion of use/possession of
drug paraphernalia, no bond set,
and on suspicion of no vehicle
liability insurance, no bond set.
Released September 6.
On September 5, Alexzandria
Jeanette Ivory, Parsons, 30, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriff on a 48 hour writ,
no bond set. Released September
7.
On September 5, Willi Lanore
Bross, Garnett, 44, was booked
into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of
Driving under the influence of
alcohol or drugs. Bond set at
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CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
State of Kansas vs. Mason
Victor Sigg, guilty plea, $153 fine.
Stella S. Burns, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Autumn Elizabeth Diehm, guilty
plea, $153 fine.
Phillip Lee Edrington, guilty
plea, $234 fine.
Jimmie W. Overall, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Kimberly D. Spencer, guilty
plea, $153 fine.
Other:
State of Kansas vs. Richard
E. Vandenberg III, one count of
criminal use of a financial card w/o
consent of owner, dismissed. One
count criminal use of a financial
card w/o consent of owner, guilty
plea, $518.43 fine and costs.
State of Kansas vs. Zachary
C. Wilper, operating vehicle without liability insurance, dismissed.
Failure to yield at stop or yield
sign, guilty plea, $183 fine.
State of Kansas vs. Mason
Shipp, Minerva, Ohio, on suspicion of vehicle; unlawful acts, e.g.
registration.
On September 3, Richard
Vandenberg Jr., Kansas City, warrant, and on suspicion of transporting an open container.
On September 3, Michael
Watts, Colony, on suspicion of
use/possession of drug paraphernalia and suspicion of lack of
vehicle liability insurance.
On September 3, James Trusty,
Garnett, on suspicion of interference with law enforcement officer
and on suspicion of theft of property/services.
On September 5, Koti Garber,
Quenemo, on suspicion of driving under the influence; second
conviction, and driving while suspended, second or subsequent
conviction.
On September 5, Tori Yotter,
Halstead, on suspicion of pedestrians under the influence of drugs.
On September 5, Asa Young,
Westphalia, on suspicion of distribution of certain hallucinogens,
suspicion of use or possession of
paraphernalia with intent to cultivate contraband substance, on
suspicion of lack of vehicle liability
insurance, on suspicion of failure
to wear seat belt, and on suspicion of no drug tax stamp marijuana.
On September 5, Willi Bross,
Garnett, on suspicion of driving
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs.
Scott Schulte
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
RECORDS…
UMBARGER
JULY 6, 1940-SEPTEMBER 9, 2016
Jerry L. Umbarger, age 76,
of Topeka, formerly of Garnett,
died Friday, September 9, 2016,
at Rolling Hills Health Center
in Topeka.
He was born on July 6, 1940,
at Garnett, to William T. and
Ruby M. (Swisher) Umbarger.
Jerry
married
Nancy
Graham and later divorced.
He retired from the National
Guard after 20 years.
Jerry was preceded in death
by his parents; and one brother, Ronald Umbarger.
He is survived by two daughters, Tammy and Melissa of
Topeka; seven brothers and
sisters, Bill Umbarger, Bob
Umbarger, Edith Christy, all
of Garnett; Norma Allen of
Topeka; Barbara Graham of
Pittsburg; Curtis Umbarger of
Garnett; David Umbarger of
Cortez, Colorado; and numerous nieces and nephews.
Funeral
services
will
be held at 10:30 a.m., on
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
at Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett, burial will follow in the Garnett
Cemetery in Garnett, Kansas.
Family will greet friends at
10:00 a.m., prior to the service.
CHASE…
FROM PAGE 1A
deploy the device, the driver
swerved and nearly struck the
officer, Pekarek said.
The car, pursued by multiple
law enforcement vehicles from
multiple agencies, entered the
city limits and sped down Park
Road before it turned, drove
through several city streets and
then headed north on U.S. 59/
Maple Street. At the intersection of Park Road and U.S. 59,
the car clipped a truck in the
intersection. The fleeing vehicle was forced to stop because
of the wreck and the driver was
arrested. The pursuit through
Garnett lasted about six minutes, Pekarek said.
The driver, who appeared to
be a male when arrested, was
dressed as a woman, Pekarek
said. There seemed to be some
confusion over the drivers
identity, as well.
Pekarek refused to provide
the names of either driver,
including the driver who was
arrested or the driver whose
vehicle was struck during
the chase, saying the incident was still under investigation, although the Kansas
Open Records Act allows for
the release of standard arrest
reports and accident reports.
Anderson County Attorney
Brandon Jones identified the
driver as Bradlee Pratt, 23. No
address was listed, but Pratt
had a Nebraska drivers license,
Jones said. Pratt was arrested
on suspicion of multiple violations, including aggravated
assault against a law enforcement officer, aggravated
assault with a deadly weapon,
aggravated battery with reckless bodily harm with a weapon, felony fleeing and attempting to elude, interference with
law enforcmeent, possession of
marijuana and possession of
drug paraphernalia. Jones said
Monday morning he hadnt yet
had a chance to review the file
but expected to file charges as
early as Monday afternoon.
The
Garnett
Police
Department has a pursuit policy that considers factors such
as population density, and
everything was done according to protocol, Pekarek said.
He noted a city police officer at
one point backed off from the
chase, and that officer mostly
was driving parallel to the car.
He also noted at least two other
agencies were actively pursuing the car through the city.
This guy was not going to
stop and we had to get him
stopped, Pekarek said.
The driver committed several felony violations, had several
warrants and was an absconder through Kansas Community
Corrections, Pekarek said.
Other agencies involved
included the Osage, Coffey
and Anderson County sheriffs
departments and the Kansas
Highway Patrol.
ALERT…
FROM PAGE 1A
In recent years, including
this past spring, burning often
was prohibited during the
spring and summer because of
drought, high winds, high temperatures or a combination of
those conditions.
Farmers and ranchers use
controlled burning, typically done in the early spring
months, as a way to improve
the health of the land by controlling weeds and restoring
nutrients. At times when burn
bans are frequent, some farmers or property owners were
concerned they wouldnt be
able to conduct a burn in a
timely manner. Mersman said
the county tries to be flexible,
and determines whether to
issue a burn ban using information from several sources
such as the National Weather
Service in Topeka and the
Rangeland Fire Index.
Our objective is trying to
help farmers and property owners to build their plan for doing
prescribed burns. If they know
ahead of time (about a burn ban
in place), it will save them from
having to call, Mersman said.
Although the burn ban alert
system is part of the countys
Code Red alert system, sign up
is not automatic. Anyone who
wants to receive the burn ban
alerts must contact the Rural
Fire/Emergency Management
office at (785) 448-6797 between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday and provide a
name, address and phone number, including the name of the
service provider if the phone
number is for cellular phone.
TRAFFIC…
FROM PAGE 1A
and passengers about such
dangers, and encourage them
to slow down, use restraints
such as seat belts, and not driving while under the influence
of alcohol or drugs, including
prescription drugs, the press
release read.
The enforcement effort will
include issuing citations for
those who refuse to obey all
traffic laws, including speeding, texting and driving, driving while impaired, and not
using seat belts or other safety
restraints.
Even one death is unacceptable, so please slow down,
put the phone away or shut
it off, and always buckle up,
Valentine said.
FROM PAGE 2A
$1,500. Released September 6.
On September 6, Richard
Eugene Vandenberg, Shawnee,
24, was booked into jail by
Anderson County Sheriff for failure to appear. Bond set at $5,000.
Released September 6.
On September 7, David Crockett
Needham, Freeman, Mo, 20, was
booked into jail by Miami County
Sheriff for warrant for arrest, cash
bond set at $350, and a second
warrant for arrest, cash bond set
at $750.
JAIL ROSTER
John Miller was booked into jail
March 11 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $2,500.
Bruce Henry was booked into
jail June 14 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $10,000.
Jeffrey Garcia was booked into
jail June 17 for Anderson County.
Now has four warrants. Total
bond set at $22,750.
Kaylee Schuster was booked
into jail June 25 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Preston Kern was booked into
jail May 14 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $500,000.
Brian Anderson was booked
into jail July 16 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000.
Michael Jason Kinder was
booked into jail July 26 for
Anderson County to serve a sentence.
Colton Sobba was booked into
jail August 5 for Anderson County.
Court Appearance.
Matt Daly was booked into jail
August 16 for Anderson County.
30 day sentence.
Christopher Bosler was booked
into Jail August 19 for Anderson
County under Warrant for arrest.
Bond set at $5,000.
Wayne Kirkland was booked
into jail August 19 for Anderson
County. Court Appearance.
WM. Danny Travis was booked
into jail on August 31 for Anderson
James Reisinger was booked
into jail June 24 for Douglas
County.
Joel Sanchez was booked into
jail June 29 for Miami County.
Brad Gilchrist was booked into
jail June 30 for Miami County.
Martin Wilson was booked into
jail July 27 for Douglas County.
Rhonda Jackson was booked
into jail July 27 for Allen County.
James Myers was booked into
jail July 27 for Allen County.
Devian Miller was booked into
jail July 28 for Miami County.
Eric Fabert was booked into jail
August 5 for Douglas County.
Philip Soref was booked into jail
August 9 for Linn County.
James Aiken was booked into
jail August 10 for Miami County.
Patrick Stoneking was booked
attorney, Lee Tetwiler, said
Sept. 1 the blanket statement
technically is legal, but he recommended they limit discussion to one item at a time.
Sheahan also complained
the board does not provide a
justification. Blome told The
Review a statement of justification is provided, offering
the example of discussing personnel to protect the privacy
interest of individuals to be
discussed. His argument was
the justification is reflected
by the part of statement set
off here in quotation marks.
However, that is actually part
of the exemption and should
be considered a subject, not a
justification. A review of multiple board agendas found no
examples of true justifications.
Sheahan said he filed the
complaint because he takes his
role as a voter and consituent
very seriously, and hopes to
make a positive difference.
My intention is to be actively involved within my commu-
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Dawn Smith was booked into
jail September 1 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000.
FARM-INS
FROM PAGE 1A
Broadcasters (KAB). Kautsch
said its the responsibility of
government boards and commissions to know the state laws
on open meetings and open
records.
And though violations may
be unintentional and the result
of a lack of training, Kautsch
said its important to call out a
board when they arent following the law.
The point isnt civil enforcement. The point is to hold their
feet to the fire and maybe
theyll comply, Kautsch said.
Sheahan began attending school board meetings in
June and said he immediately noticed KOMA violations.
Sheahan said he previously
served on a planning commission for the City of Shawnee
and described himself as a
geek whose hobby is governmental topics. He said he talked to USD 365 board members
about his concerns, and at an
August meeting presented a letter to the board that asked for
changes in the way they introduce executive sessions. When
the matter was not resolved
to his satisfaction, he filed the
complaint.
In simplified terms, government entities can have secret
meetings in which the public
is not allowed to attend. But
they can only discuss a limited
number of subjects, and they
have to tell people what subjects they will discuss, when
and where they will have the
secret meeting, how long the
discussion will take, and when
theyll resume public discussion. They are not allowed
to take any action in a secret
meeting.
More specifically, a board
must state the subject to be discussed and provide a justification for the secret meeting.
Kautsch said boards must state
both a subject and a justification. Typically, the subject
is stated as one of the exemptions allowed under KOMA,
such as to discuss personnel.
The justification should provide more detail specific to that
exemption, such as contract
renewal.
Kautsch said it can be tricky
for a board to state a justification while still protecting confidential information, but if
they are struggling with that,
they havent done the training.
Sheahan complained that
USD 365 introduces executive
sessions with a blanket statement that includes several
possible exemptions allowed
under KOMA, rather than telling people exactly what subject
will be discussed. The boards
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nity. I am not someone who sits
around and complains about
issues or problems. I educate
myself and propose potential
solutions, he said.
Although Sheahan filed his
complaint with the attorney
generals office, Kautsch said
he might not see immediate
results. He said the AGs office
at times is slow to respond, and
had an example of a response
to a complaint that took four
years.
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785-448-3121
into jail August 12 for Douglas
County.
Nathan Vickers was booked
into jail August 12 for Douglas
County.
Garnel M. Williams was booked
into jail August 15 for Douglas
County.
Trey Alford was booked into jail
August 17 for Douglas County.
Leland White was booked into
jail August 22 for Douglas County.
Tyler Snipes was booked into
jail August 22 for Linn County.
Andrew Duncan was booked
into jail August 25 for Linn County.
Patrick Crawford was booked
into jail August 25 for Linn County.
Shannen Price was booked
into jail September 1 for Franklin
County.
Steven Archuleta was booked
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Ryan Clark was booked into jail
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Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
LOCAL
A generation of cancer
funding, yet no cure
If a plumber came to your house continually for 45 years to unclog a drain but never
actually got the problem fixed, would you
continue to trust him?
Would you continue to take your car to the
same mechanic to fix the same slipping transmission that you first brought to him in 1971?
Those answers seem obvious. So why is
it we continue to pay, through public tax
dollars and through numerous charities and
public-private organizations, for a research
industry for cancer, muscular dystrophy and
other diseases that for nearly 50 years have
failed to deliver promised cures?
Its a question that chisels at the base of
even the most staunch anti-conspiracy theorist: after decades of supposed research; after
marketing campaigns aimed at the emotions
and sympathies of people whose own lives or
families have been struck by dread diseases;
after billions of research dollars have poured
into these industries for a generation, why
does the goal of a cure remain elusive?
It may be the greatest unresolved quest
in American history. It took Americans a
little over a decade to put a man on the moon
from the first warning beeps that the Soviets
Sputnik had gained space superiority over
us in 1957. We put a million men in uniform
and with our allies defeated the two largest
and most brutal armies in world history with
victory in World War II. Yet with billions of
dollars raised over a generation funding the
greatest scientific minds in tandem with the
fastest advancing technology, we come up
short on cures for diseases we continually sell
as research fundraising priorities.
Its true that we cant discount the value of
research and advanced treatments that have
come from it. The statistics point out that people diagnosed with cancer today live longer
lives than they ever have indeed longer than
even a few decades ago but always under the
shadow of the disease that may recur.
That hasnt changed since Richard Nixons
War on Cancer was proclaimed in 1971 despite
the money raised for it. The same goes for
those touched by muscular dystrophy, whose
famed Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon began
besting its fundraising goals clear back to
1966. Billions of dollars have been raised to
combat these and other plagues to no final
avail.
Cancer care is a $125 billion per year annual market in the United States alone more
than the estimated market for all illegal drugs
in the states. Thats money charged for the
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
pharmaceuticals, radiation treatments, surgeries, lab services, equipment, care personnel, hospitals, equipment and other treatment
facilities that make up the massive cancer
care industry. More than $6 billion in taxpayer funds are cycled through numerous federal
agencies like the National Cancer Institute.
The NCI estimates cancer care in the U.S.
will top $173 billion by 2020. On top of the
billions committed in transacted dollars and
in charitable giving through the American
Cancer Society and numerous other charities
claiming to fund research, some cancer medications can still cost patients and/or their
insurance companies over $10,000 per month
for treatment.
That $125 billion figure is notable because
it represents not just payrolls and costs for
equipment and doctors salaries and intravenous needles and hospital room fees, etc.,
it also reflects myriad publicly traded companies whose stock may be owned by many
of us certainly anyone with a 401k, IRA or
529 college account investment or numerous
other investment vehicles. Whether or not we
know it, many if not most of us who are retirement or education investors have money riding on the continuing and continuing and
continuing fight against cancer.
Conspiracy lines about cancer cures and
water-burning engines and the like make for
great television, book and movie plots but so
far thats all they are unproven.
Yet the numerical facts remain: Cure cancer, and that industry along with its $125
billion and tentacles networking throughout
the economy is gone. The why is up to
public conjecture, but there is no doubt that
our failure to cure these heinous diseases is a
very lucrative one.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
This is for residents that get their mail
delivered to their house. If you get letters that do not belong to you, please put
them back on top of the mail box for the
mailman to deliver to the rightful owner.
Thank you.
Regarding illegals entering the U.S.: Any
idiot knows you do not believe everything you read in a magazine or find on
the Internet because they print what the
public wants to hear. Who knows the facts
more than the border guards who work
the border day after day monitoring. They
are in line with the most recent facts and
figures. If you believe the Internet, you
must also believe in the Easter Bunny.
Since you think you know it all, you
should inform the border guards and tell
them they dont know what theyre talking
about. They will appreciate your help.
Also, I dont have my hands in Donald
Trumps pants, but at least I dont have my
nose up Hillarys behind.
I have seen nothing in writing from the
wind farm people about any $500,000 payment, only what theyve talked about. Talk
Trump and immigration: Yes, America First
Donald Trumps speech in Arizona has
occasioned wailing and rending of garments
among the commentariat and respectable
people everywhere. At bottom, the cause of
the freakout is simple: Trump believes in
immigration laws, and the countrys elite
really doesnt.
Minus a few trademark excesses that are
too ingrained in the Trump shtick to abandon at this point — e.g., we are going to build
a wall and Mexico is going to pay for it
— Trumps speech was rock-solid on policy.
The core of it represents what, more or less,
any realistic regime of immigration enforcement would look like.
That the opinion elite recoiled in horror
shows how out of sympathy it is with borders
and what it takes to enforce them. It was
understandable that everyone felt whiplash.
Trump had primed people to expect something different, both with his recent public
wobbliness and his quick strike into Mexico,
where he lucked out in a successful meeting with that countrys hapless president,
Enrique Pena Nieto.
And Trump didnt do himself any favors
by giving the Arizona speech in a rally setting. When he is in his shouty mode, Trump
could read the phone book and make it sound
like an outlandish screed.
All that said, Trump nailed a few theses to
the door of his promised great, impenetrable
border wall that are important and too often
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
neglected:
–Immigration policy should serve the
interests of the United States and its workers. This should be axiomatic. Yet it has
taken Trump to make the proposition central
to the immigration debate. There is no doubt
that illegal immigration is good for illegal
immigrants, but the first obligation of the
United States is to protect its citizens and
legal residents.
–Illegal immigrants compete against lowskilled workers already here and are a net
drain on the government. Even if they work
hard (and most do), illegal immigrants are
unlikely to earn enough to pay much in
taxes, and their families access welfare bene-
fits through their children.
–Anyone who has entered the United
States illegally, Trump said, is subject
to deportation. This sounds radical only
because of the progress the left has made
in delegitimizing deportation. If we arent
going to have a sweeping amnesty or tolerate
the status quo, illegal immigrants must be
subject to deportation.
–Legal immigration, too, should serve the
interests of the nation. It shouldnt be out of
bounds, as Trump suggested, to want to tap
the brakes and adjust whom we are accepting to emphasize merit, skill and proficiency.
Trumps speech was the soundest immigration speech ever delivered by a presidential nominee, and a total policy victory
for restrictionists. There are two problems,
though.
One is that it is such a tough-minded agenda, it needs to be presented with a deft touch.
Instead, Trump seemingly went out of his
way to make his policy sound as audacious
and threatening as possible.
Two, if Trump loses, this agenda will be
discredited, and restrictionists will instantly
be as embattled as ever, once again fighting
a desperate rearguard action against a political establishment and opinion elite that
consider their priorities bizarre and hateful.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Police appreciate communitys support
To the editor,
I wanted to take this opportunity to thank
our community for their continued support
to myself and my fellow law enforcement
officers. I can say without hesitation that it
means a lot to all of us. From the prayer vigil
at the Garnett Fire Department, to the recognition at the football game, it has meant a lot.
In addition to those community organized
events, I want to thank the individuals who
have taken it upon themselves to demonstrate their personal support. These expressions have included placing stickers or blue
tape on their vehicles, tying blue ribbons
around trees and putting blue bulbs in their
porch lights. Yes, I even noticed the semi
driver who gave me a huge thumbs up out
his window while I was responding to an
accident with my lights and sirens activated.
Id also like to say that rather you demonstrate support or not, everyone I know will
still fulfill the oath they took when they
accepted this job. You can even express
your total disdain for my profession and I
will still do my job. I will add this caveat
though. Please remember the phrase, time
and place.
The time to express your opinion of how
a law enforcement officer is doing their job,
is not when they are in the middle of doing
said job. We are trying to multi-task while
we are dealing with a potentially volatile
situation that you may not even be aware
of. By dividing our attention at that very
moment and attempting to interject your
opinion, you arent doing anyone any favors.
You are only creating another facet that can
draw our attention away from a situation.
This can get people hurt.
Written complaints that go through the
correct channels will be given exponentially
more credence than a statement screamed
from a sidewalk. If something nefarious
did occur, it will be dealt with, I assure you.
However, please keep in mind that encounters with law enforcement officers are documented through video these days. If you
file a false claim, state law provides a law
enforcement agency with the ability to file
criminal charges against you.
Again, thank you to all of the citizens in
our community. Its just another reason
among many others that makes me very
proud to serve the community that I was
born and raised in.
Robert McLeod
Garnett Police Department
is cheap. If one of the various LLCs doing
the contracting for this outfit goes out of
business, the county can stomp its feet all
they want for their $500,000 and wont get
a penny. Do you think this deal is set up so
the counties can make money? Be real. This
is a tax dodge for giant oil and gas corporations to dodge their federal income tax and
nothing more. You seem to have a problem
with a new hospital in Garnett that was 70
percent paid for by somebody else. The reason those folks supported it and oppose the
wind farm is that they support things that
are good for the town and they oppose those
things that are bad for it. Whats so hard to
understand about that? Maybe you should
try listening to them.
City Garnett: Please do not cut down the
trees or spray the weeds in and around the
stream or drainage ditch at the southeast
corner Seventh Avenue and Cedar. You
will be destroying the future home of birds
and squirrels, mosquitoes, snakes and rats
whatever may make that area their home
besides rabbits. By spraying you will be
contaminating the water that may accumulate in the ditch. And please do not cut the
weeds or the trees thats growing in that
ditch around that area. It doesnt belong to
the city. Thank you.
I have a no confidence vote in our city
commission. I want to tell the city manager
to hang in there and theyll go away. They
always do.
I dont like the football games at the new
football stadium out at the high school.
I think they should be moved back to
Garnetts old stadium. Just doesnt feel like
a football game. Thank you.
Contact Your
Legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
email pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521. Fax: (202) 228-6966
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep. Lynn Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 225-6601
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2016.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
5A
LOCAL
Pieces and Patches Quilt Guild installs officers Anderson 100th birthday
The Pieces and Patches Quilt Guild
was called to order by President, Bonnie
Deiter, on August 25, 2016, at 9:30am in
the Anderson County Extension meeting
room. Roll call was answered by 27 members and guests, Mary Parrott and Lois
Miller. The minutes of the July meeting
were approved as printed in the newsletter. Terrie Gifford gave the treasurers
report.
Committee Reports:
ProgramSandra Moffett reminded
members of the Patricia Knoechel program on September 14 and that they need
to bring a dozen cookies to the event.
Posters about the event have been placed
in various businesses and book marks are
also available for those interested. Sandra
reported that Heartland Quilt Guild has a
Facebook page. Bonnie Deiter will present
the October program on a Square quilt
made from stripes. Judy Stukey will present the November program.
Charity QuiltsPhyllis Gordon donated a charity quilt.
Opportunity Quilt 2017Snake River
log cabin was shown and is complete. It
contains 4460 pieces.
Anderson County FairTerrie Gifford
provided a summary of the fair. Kay
Roeckers won the Grand and Reserve
Champion in the hand quilted division.
Lynn Wawrzewski won Grand Champion
and Lynda Feuerborn Reserve Champion
in the machine quilted division. There
were 27 entries by 12 individuals and 9
Challenge quilt blocks. Terrie thanked all
of the members who assisted during the
fair.
Block of the MonthMarvelle Harris
showed the August block for Judy McArdle,
Beaming Star, and distributed the pattern.
Several members showed their June and
July blocks.
Challenge blocksCynthia Fletcher
showed a table runner using 10 of her challenge blocks.
Old BusinessBonnie reported that
the new officers will evaluate and update
the role of the Historian and report their
ideas back to the membership.
Installation of officersJudy Stukey
installed the following new officers
using a Construction theme since their
purpose is to Build the Guild. Bonnie
Deiter President, Sandra Moffett Vice
President, Connie Hatch Secretary, Lynn
Wawrzewski Treasurer, Sharon Rich
Historian and Terrie Gifford Newsletter
Editor.
Secret Sister gifts were received by
Sharon Rich and Cynthia Fletcher.
Show and Tell The following items
were shown: Phyllis Gordon 2014 Block
of the Month quilt and 3 table runners/
toppers; Bonnie Deiter 2014 Block of the
Month quilt; Lynn Wawrzewski Mariners
Compass quilt; Connie Hatch a pillow and
candle cradle; Cynthia Fletcher and her
mother, Lois Miller a Bear paw quilt top
made by Cynthias grandmother, small
Trip around the World quilt, Flower quilt
made by her grandmother, Sun Bonnet
Sue quilt made by Lois miller and an
Embroidered state bird and flower quilt;
Jackie Gardner a 4th of July table mat and
a purse; Kay Roeckers a quilt top; Marlene
Walburn 4 pot holders using jeans; Sharon
Rich a table topper and a quilt representing quilt shops she visited; Terrie Gifford
Parker Days challenge block. Cynthia
Fletcher won the Show and Tell prize of a
pattern.
The meeting was adjourned by Bonnie
Deiter. Members then enjoyed a wonderful
covered dish luncheon. Members donated
school supplies that will be distributed to
the local schools.
Marie Ellington (Stiffler)
Anderson is celebrating her
100th birthday on September
21, 2016.
She is the mother of
Barbara Welsh of Garnett,
Nancy Dodson of Broken
Bow, OK and Phil Stiffler of
Platte City, MO.
Marie and her husband,
Bill Stiffler, owned and
operated the Stiffler Grain
Company in Centerville,
Kansas for 17 years. After
Bills passing, Marie moved
to Garnett, where she married the late Claude Anderson
of Anderson Ford. At the age
of 97, Marie moved to Kansas
City and more recently Platte
City, Missouri.
In her prime, Marie
could be seen driving cattle
trucks into the Kansas City
Stockyards. She also fried up
two whole chickens a day for
the farm help and that was
just the appetizer to a full
Anderson
family style dinner.
Please send her a card
or stop by for a visit with
her if you are in the Platte
City area. Marie Anderson,
c/o Heritage Village, 15
Wallingford Drive Apt 208,
Platte City, MO 64079 Ph. 816858-6310
30th Annual
Ol Marais River Run
Sept. 17-18 at Forest Park in Ottawa
Rain or shine! 1972 or older vehicles only.
Home of the Back to the 60s
Cruise Night Saturday in downtown Ottawa.
Free admission for all spectators.
Have fun checking out the great cars!
2×3
adamson
Have fun at the
River Run!
2×3
dales
See Rod at Dales Body Shop
for all your auto body needs!
4×10.5
biz directory
Suttons Jewelry
207 S. Main Downtown Ottawa
2×3
(785) 242-3723
suttons
Diamonds Rubies Sapphires
Other Gemstone Jewelry
Gold and Sterling Silver Jewelry
Check out our website:
www.suttonsjewelryinc.com
Family Owned
Since 1950
Jewelry Repairs
Tues – Fri 10am – 5:30pm
done on location
Sat 10am – 2pm Closed Sun & Mon
Will open with appointment.
Have Fun At The Show!
2×2
Penka
Auto Repair
penka
auto
Now Providing Tire Service
171 U.S. HWY 59
Richmond, KS 66080
M-F 8am – 5:30pm
(785) 835-6699
BIENIES
2×2
Family Owned &
Operated Since 1957
BODY SHOP
Foreign
& Domestic
beines
COLLISION REPAIR SPECIALIST FULL MECHANICAL
ALIGNMENTS – INCLUDING SERVICE TRUCKS
CHECK US FOR TIRES!
126 N. POPLAR OTTAWA
785-242-4082
1111 E. 23rd St.
3313 Nebraska Terrace
Lawrence, KS 66046
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-843-2676
785-242-1463
www.mcconnellmachineryco.com
6A
LOCAL
Four Winds Chapter to
recognize MIA/POWs
A scheduled meeting of
the Four Winds Chapter of
National Society of Daughters
of the American Revolution
convened at 1:30 on September
1, 2016. Regent Donna Roberts
presided. Donna then welcomed 15 members and 1 guest,
Kay Roeckers, who is patiently waiting on finalization of
ancestor documentation.
Donna led the Pledge of
Allegiance and Alice Walker
led the American Creed.
Linda Coffman read the
President Generals message
and Judy Carr followed with
the National Defense Report.
Minutes of June 23, 2016 meeting was read by Ginger Baird.
Minutes approved. Treasurers
report was approved as read by
Louise Stites.
Peggy Brecheisen was hostess. Tasty refreshments served
on a table decorated in patriotic service were enjoyed by all.
Correspondence: Kathryn
West, State Regent sent
thank you to our chapter for
participation in her reception. Berry College: thank
you from Scott Brenhardt for
requesting information about
the school. He included two
colorful booklets along with
the book about the college,
Miracle in the Mountains for
our pleasure. Marilyn Kohn
appreciates receiving meeting minutes by email. Louise
Stites then reported on some
updates for the Bryan family and read a short note from
Edna Henderson .
Chair Committee reports:
Indian minutes:
Peggy
Brecheisen gave very interesting report on the life of
Sacajawea and the part she
played in American history
with the Louis and Clark expedition. Peggy also shared two
colored 8×10 pictures she had
printed of Sacajawea. DAR
Schools: Linda Coffman combined her report with a short
program at the end of the meeting. Linda passed around the
marketing booklets which
Scott Brenhardt had sent.
Conservation
minutes:
Carla gave tips for conserving
water and reported on monies received for sending in
our recycled ink cartridges.
Womens issues: as previously
decided, each member is to take
a turn at different meetings to
introduce herself and give us
a living bio on who we are outside of DAR. This month it was
our pleasure to be introduced
to the life of our new member
Brigitte Brecheisen-Huss and
all of the activities of her life.
Unfinished
Business:
Service and volunteer hours
were collected. Report from
Carla on Dinner Theatre donations. Regent Donna asked how
many members had read the
Declaration of Independence
during July. There were 12
members and one prospective
(waiting on National verification) member who had read it.
New Business: Donna gave
notice that Friday, September
16, 2016 our local VFW is
offering a dinner at the VFW
Building honoring MIA/POWs.
This is a very somber ceremonial meal remembering those
who gave everything that we
might enjoy our freedoms. A
head count was taken to be
given to those who cook. Our
chapter will be furnishing desserts and setting up displays
at the VFW. DAR National
Service Day is October 11. A
request had been posed to our
chapter to help construct a
scrap book from salvaged photos for an area person. Ginger
motioned to do this activity
and Carla seconded. We will
work on this project October 3
and 4.
Vote on two prospective
members: Kristina Kinney,
of Garnett, and Jane Hartley,
of New Strawn have completed most of their verification
process. Iona Sweers motioned
and Ginger Baird seconded
that an offer of membership be
extended to both women.
Regent Donna reported that at
Continental Congress she had
been questioned by our State
Regent Kathryn West why our
chapter had not been contributing our $40 to the Magazine
Co-op Fund. Discussion followed.
Juanita Kellerman
motioned and Carla Ewert seconded that we pay the $40.
Donna presented her bill for
reimbursement for postage for
mailing the coupons. Ginger
motioned and Juanita seconded that we reimburse for postage costs.
Programs:
Constitution
Week is September 11-17 this
year. Regent Donna spent a few
minutes with quizzes and giving facts about the Constitution.
Linda Coffman gave info on the
story of Martha Berry and her
School. Berry College was one
of the first colleges sponsored
by DAR for support. Miracle
in the Mountains by Harnett T
Kane is about the struggles of
Martha Berry as she, having
come from a family of wealth,
sought to address the needs of
those less fortunate by providing them an education.
Announcements: Christmas
Tea December 10, 2016 will be
held in the Garnett Library.
Members are encouraged to
invite prospective members
and friends. Hats are encouraged. There will be prizes.
Naturalization
Ceremony
is Friday September 30, 2016
at 10:30 am in Fort Scott, KS.
Carpooling encouraged.
Next Meeting: October 1, at
1:30 with guest speaker, Robert
Tyson reviewing his book
Coming to Kansas, a story and
accounts in the life of Roberts
grandfather. The meeting will
be held at the Garnett Library
and the public is welcome.
Meeting Adjourned: Carla
Ewert motioned meeting
adjourn and Peggy Brecheisen
seconded.
Ginger Baird
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
4 bedroom – 2 bath, very clean,
CH&AC. $675 per month, (785)
418-5435.
ag16tf
For sale by owner – 14.2 acres,
wooded, 2 water meters, electricity, fruit trees, metal barn
with concrete floor (24×40 with
10×12 overhead door on front
side and sliding door on side).
Hay shed, misc. buildings,
small pond and spring. (785)
615-1413 after 1pm $89,000.
*ag16*
Earn $500 a day: Lincoln
Heritage Life Insurance Wants
Insurance Agents . Leads, No
Cold Calls . Commissions Paid
Daily . Agency Training . Life
License Required. Call 1-888713-6020.
Lubbers
Chevrolet-Ford
in Cheney, KS has immediate openings for auto techs.
Min. two yrs. experience in a
repair facility or completion of
tech school program. Signing
bonus! Paid training, uniforms,
vacation & life ins. policy.
401K, health, dental & vision.
Discounted parts & vehicle
purchases. Five day work
week, no weekends required.
Compensation varies with
level of training/experience.
316- 542-7317 or rick_lubbers@
lubberscars.com
Water Department Position,
City of Council Grove, ability to pass State Certification
required, position open until
filled. Applications/details
available at City Hall, 620-7675417. EOE.
Lab tech: MT or MLT, ASCP
or equivalent, progressive
southeast Nebraska hospital,
phlebotomy skills required.
Competitive pay scale, excellent benefits. Apply: www.jchc.
us. Info: HR (402) 729-6850.
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Tina ext. 301 or Lori ext. 303
1-800-926-6869.
Driver Trainees Needed!
Become a driver for Stevens
Transport! Earn $800 Per Week
Paid CDL Training! Stevens
covers all costs! 1-888-749-2303
drive4stevens.com
REAL ESTATE
1/2 section from land – tillable and pasture with a very
productive oil lease. Kincaid
area, (620) 439-5662.
sp13t2*
Newly listed: Nice 3 BR
home on 3/4 acre—-EDGE of
Lecompton! Do you like to sit
on a big porch and listen to
birds instead of neighbors?
Do you like to grow your own
food? If so, this home could be
for you. Located on the edge
of lecompton on 3/4 acre, this
home features 3 BR, 2 bath,
big front porch, many vegetable gardens, flower gardens,
fruit trees, etc. Home also has
a wood stove in addition to
Central heat/air. Live the Self
Sustained Lifestyle you have
been dreaming about!! $132,000
Contact Darrell Mooney at Pia
Friend Realty. 785-393-3957.
More pictures at www.piafriend.com
**ap26**
Built in 1901 – by the town
Banker, this 3-4 bedroom,
3 bath Victorian is located at 906 Liberty in charming Oskaloosa. Wrap around
porch, new kitchen, new baths,
new siding, pcket dors, stained
glass windows, original woodwork, auxiliary wood furnace,
full dry basement, fireplace,
garage and much more. Home
has been renovated from top
to bottom in the last 8 years.
30 minutes to Lawrence and
Topeka. Dont miss this chance
of a lifetime to own this timeless beauty! See pictures at
www.piafriend.com. Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty,
(785) 393-3957.
**ap12**
1×3
1×3
schulte
HELP WANTED
Semi driver – wanted for local
deliveries. Hazmat & CDL
required. Apply in person at
Taylor Oil, 504 Main Street,
Wellsville, KS (78) 883-2072.
ag30t4
If youre looking – for a job,
we need responsible, honest
oilfield workers with some
experience to pull wells. Full
or part-time. Please call (405)
641-6538.
sp13t2
Drivers – amazing pay package.
Bonuses and great home time.
Full/PT, lots of miles. Free life
insurance + new equipment.
CDL-A (855) 765-3331.
sp6t4*
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Do you or a loved one STRUGGLE on the stairs?
We have the AFFORDABLE solution!
2×2
kpa acorn
MENTION THIS AD FOR
$250 OFF*
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF CRAWFORD
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Interest of
Adrianna Kirkland
Case No. 16JC141G
NOTICE OF HEARING
TO: Unknown Father
A Motion for Finding of Unfitness and
Termination of Parental Rights or Appointment
of Permanent Guardian has been filed requesting the Court terminate parental rights, for the
above name child.
You are required to appear in the District
Court at 602 N Locust, Pittsburg, Kansas, on
October 12, 2016 at 2:00 p.m., or prior to that
time file your written response with the Clerk of
this Court. If, after a child has been adjudged
to be a child in need of care, the court finds
a parent or parents to be unfit, the court may
make an order permanently terminating the
parents parental rights.
Mark Fern, an attorney, has been appointed
as guardian ad litem for the child. Each parent
or other legal custodian of the child has the right
to appear and be heard personally either with
or without an attorney. Sarah Mills, an attorney,
has been appointed to represent you. You may
contact him at 620-724-4111.
Dated: September 6, 2016
Clerk of the District Court
By Sandie Green
Trial Court Clerk III
sp13t2
Part-time
Deli & Grocery Clerks
1×2
Experience preferred.
country
Apply in person at
Country Mart
425 N. Maple Garnett
See store manager
for details.
SERVICES
Printing: Business cards, custom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
1×3
HEATING & COOLING
2×2
Installers
&sService
Techs
a
d
a
m
o
n
Pay determined by qualifications. Paid vacation,
sick days, uniforms, 401k plan included.
Apply at 102 S. Walnut in
Ottawa or send resume to
charlie@adamsonbros.com
l
annua
47th
Saturday, Sept. 17
9 am – 4 pm
Hillsboro, KS
The Midwestern
Creative Art
Market
For information 620-947-3506
director@hillsboroartsandcraftsfair.org
hillsboroartsandcraftsfair.org
PURCHASE OF A NEW STAIRLIFT!
*Certain restrictions apply.
CALL NOW
TOLL-FREE
1-800-978-5840
DOING WHAT WE SAY SINCE 1935.
SEE FOR YOURSELF.
SIGN-ON BONUSES UP TO $7,500
AVAILABLE IN YOUR AREA!
2×4
kpa qsi
Opportunities available in these divisions
VAN | INTERMODAL | DEDICATED
Notice to terminate
parental rights
(First published in The Anderson County
Review on September 13, 2016)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Team and Solo | Regional and Over-the-Road
COMPANY DRIVER BENEFITS
$6,000 tuition reimbursement | Paid orientation and ongoing training
Medical, dental and vision insurance and 401(k) plan
schneiderjobs.com
schneiderowneroperators.com
800-44-PRIDE | 800-28-LEASE
PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2016 10:00 A.M.
Located in Richmond, KS – 59 Hwy. to Main St.
then West just North of the Grain Elevator
Looking for work?
2×4
focus
Focus Workforces is currently seeking
Warehouse Associates that can perform
a variety of job duties and functions at
an Ottawa KS Distribution Center.
Shifts: Days/Evenings/Weekends
We are looking for candidates who
possess the desire and the ability
to work in a fast-paced
environment.
If you are driven and ready for
a new challenge, we want to
interview you!
Pay up to
10.50/hr
$
Apply at:
www.workatfocus.com
or in person at
1301 N. Davis Rd., Ottawa KS
Call (785) 832-7000
TRACTORS
*77 I.H. 186 Hydro Cab, A.C., New
Hydro, A.C., Brakes, PTO, Clutch,
Cab Kit, Injection Pump, Original
Paint. 6030 hrs.
*Farmall Super H, Parade Ready,
2 Seats, 58 Umbrella
*Farmall Super MTA, W.F., P.S., 2-pt.
New Paint and Parts, New Rubber,
Parade Ready
*Farmall Super MTA, N.F., P.S., New
Paint and Tires, Parade Ready
*Farmall Super M, P.S., N.F.
*Farmall M-D, W.F., Canopy
*Farmall 450, Gas, W.F., 2-pt.
*Farmall 706 Wheatland, Diesel,
W.F. 2-pt., 540-1000
*Farmall 560 Gas, N.F., 2-pt
*Farmall 560 Diesel, W.F., Bareback
*Farmall M
*Farmall M
*Farmall 300, N.F., 3-pt.
*Farmall 300 Utility, W.F., 3-pt.
*Farmall 350, N.F., 3-pt.
*Farmall H
*Farmall 400, Gas, Parts Tractor
*Farmall 400, Diesel, Parts Tractor
*Farmall Super MTA, 2-pt. w/ #35 I.H.
Loader, Engine Stuck
*Farmall M, Parts Tractor w/ M&W
Hand Clutch
*H Parts Tractor w/ cultivator off
Regular
*Regular, Full Steel (Not Running)
*I.H. Hoods, Grills, Wheel Weights,
Misc. Parts, J.D. Flat Top Fenders
A.C. D-15 Rear Wheels
FIRE TRUCK – TRAILERS – FLATBED
PULL PLOWS & EQUIPMENT
For full listing & pictures, please see www.kansasauctions.net
SELLER: TERRY FEUERBORN 785-448-4624
Sale conducted by
Hamilton Auctions
AUCTIONEER: MARK HAMILTON
785-214-0560 (C) 785-759-9805 (H)
GIB THURMAN
816-738-9432
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
7A
LOCAL
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a Happy Ad!
More LOCAL customers read Review classifieds than any other newspaper!
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
SERVICES
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
AUTOS
Credit to established accounts
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
SERVICES
Tutor – all subjects, all levels.
Hourly rate negotiable. (785)
204-2002.
sp6t2
ryter
(913) 594-2495
Dales Electrical Service
dales
Richmond, KS
Residential & Light Commercial
785-418-6050
Come See Why Country Clipper
Stands Out
1×2
hecks
Joystick or Twin Stick Steering
Patented Stand-Up Deck For Easy Maintenance
All Welded Steel Decks
3/5 Year Limited Warranty
Jonsered Tillers, Walk Mowers,
Tractor Mowers, Trimmers in Stock
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN Mon. – Fri. Sat. by Appointment
1×4
STILES
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
LIVESTOCK
LAWN & GARDEN
HAPPY ADS
Stop overpaying for your
prescriptions! Save up to 93%!
Call our licensed Canadian and
International pharmacy service to compare prices and get
$15.00 off your first prescription and Free Shipping. 1-800981-6179
Po r t a bl e
O x yg e n
Concentrator ? May Be
Covered by Medicare! Reclaim
independence and mobility
with the compact design and
long-lasting battery of Inogen
One. Free information kit! Call
800-731-1968
Let me start and feed – your
calves until the prices get better. Room for 500 head. (785)
448-6471, (785) 917-1229. sp13t4*
Baby dairy – and beef cross
calves for sale. Nichols Dairy,
(620) 344-0790.
sp13t4*
Little John Sherwood
Happiness is . . . Checking
out Baumans new selection of
glider rockers. Open 8:30-5:00
Monday – Friday. 9-4 Saturday.
sp13t2
NOTICES
1×2
b a u man
FARM & AG
Other Services
Available
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or mor trees. Call (916) 232-6781
in St. Joseph for details. dc8tf
Garden Mums
Card of Thanks
Hardy fall garden mums Keims Greenhouse, 10 miles
west on Hwy. 31. (785) 218-1785
or (785) 448-7108. Sale barn on
Tuesdays.
ag30t5
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . Checking
out Baumans new selection of
bunk beds and childrens furniture. (785) 448-3216.
sp13t2
The family of Raymond Wittman wishes
to thank everyone for their support at
the time of his death. Whether you said
a prayer, made a phone call, gave a
hug, food, donations, flowers, plant or
card, each act of kindness was deeply
appreciated. Special thanks to the staff
of Golden Heights for their loving care &
to Crossroads Hospice, Fr. Adam, Garnett
VFW Post 6397, American Legion Post
48, Knights of Columbus, Reuben &
Stacy at Feuerborn Funeral Service.
1×2
wittma
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
CHILDRENS
AIDE
2×3
CHILDRENS
AIDE – Working with children after
sek
mental
school, 12-20 hours/Mon.-Fri. Requires drivers
license and reliable vehicle. Prefer experience
w/children. Min. 18 years old.
Drug screen required.
Questions, call Liz at 620-365-5717.
JB Construction
2×2
jc construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
NURSE RN/LPN
Life Care Center of Burlington
2×3
Full-time and part-time positions available
life
care
center
for all
shifts to
state-licensed nurses.
Long-term care experience preferred.
We offer great pay and benefits in a
team-oriented environment.
Tracy Bartley
620-364-2117 620-364-2013 Fax
601 Cross St. Burlington, KS 66839
Tracy_Bartley@LCCA.com
LifeCareCareers.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer 77934
Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center
PO Box 807 Iola, KS 66749.
Applications at 519 S. Elm
or email jobs@sekmhc.org
EOE/AA.
ESTATE SALE – LOG HOMES
PAY THE BALANCE OWED ONLY!!!
AMERICAN LOG HOMES IS ASSISTING FINAL RELEASE
2×4
OF
ESTATE & ACCOUNT SETTLEMENT ON HOUSES.
kpa log homes
1)Model # 101 Carolina $40,840BALANCE OWED $17,000
2)Model # 303 Little Rock $38,525BALANCE OWED $15,000
3)Model # 403 Augusta $42,450BALANCE OWED $16,500
NEW – HOMES HAVE NOT BEEN MANUFACTURED
Make any plan design changes you desire!
Comes with Complete Building Blueprints &
Construction Manual
Windows, Doors, and Roofing not included
NO TIME LIMIT FOR DELIVERY!
BBB
A+ Rating
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, September 17, 2016 10:00 a.m.
2561 Minnesota Rd. LaHarpe, KS
2×5
otto auctions
169 Hwy. S to Minnesota Rd. exit, 3 mi. E. Possibly running 2 rings.
Looking for work?
went-
785-835-7057
delph
MISCELLANEOUS
Hopper bottom company with regional, dedicated
runs, home on weekends. Benefits include, paid
vacation, health insurance and safety incentive bonus.
Call Dan @ 620-437-6616 or
send request for application by email to
dredding@rctruckinginc.com
l i t t l Hardy
e
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
Hot Water – pressure washers
new or reconditioned. See one
at R&R Equipment in Greeley
or call Wholesale Washer Co.,
(620) 583-2421.
ag23t8*
Lenders Offering $0 Down
for land owners Roll your New
Home and Land Improvements
into One Package. Discount
National Pricing on Breeze
II Doublewide and our 60th
Anniversary
Singlewide.
Trade-ins Welcome!! 866-8586862
DIRECTV. NFL Sunday Ticket
(FREE!) w/Choice All-Included
Package. $60/mo for 24 months.
No upfront costs or equipment
to buy. Ask about next day
installation! 1- 800-261-7086
DISH TV 190 channels plus
Highspeed Internet Only
$49.94/mo! Ask about a 3 year
price guarantee & get Netflix
included for 1 year! Call Today
1-800-676-6809
Life Alert. 24/7. One press
of a button sends help FAST!
Medical, Fire, Burglar. Even if
you cant reach a phone! Free
Brochure. Call 800-605-3619
Farm
1×2& Greenhouse
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
2×2
WELL
CDL DRIVERS WANTED!!!
rcQUALIFIED
trucking
2×4
kpa jc
worth
MISCELLANEOUS
2×4
focus
gardner
1st
Shift Available:
Focus Workforces is currently seeking Order
Selectors for a Gardner KS Distribution Center.
Sunday-Wednesday
7am-5:30pm
2nd Shift Available:
Wednesday-Saturday
7am-5:30pm
Pay up to
10.50/hr
$
We are seeking to interview and hire motivated candidates who
possess the desire to work, the motivation to show up to work
on time and work their entire shift. We are seeking individuals
who can commit to work. We are seeking candidates who value
commitment, candidates who will give 100% day in and day out!
Apply online:
www.workatfocus.com
(913) 230-9479
GRADER, TRUCK, EQUIPMENT, TOOLS & PLUMBING
Galion 104 motor grader, Series A, PS, 12 blade(reserve); 72
Chev Custom 20 truck, 4WD, 3/4T, manual trans, flatbed,
sold w/bale spike & toolbox; truck bed trlr; walk behind
trencher; 3pt bale carrier & 3-bttm plow; wire panels; T-posts;
tanks; 1 & 2 steel pipe; 5/8 steel cable, new & used; drill press;
table saw; elec, cordless & hand tools; wood-burning stove;
many plumbing & elec supplies; hardware; scrap.
BOAT, OUTDOOR, POULTRY & PRIMITIVES
17 fishing boat, 115hp Evinrude mtr & trlr; fishing poles;
patio swing; composte bin; yard tools; plastic barrels; brooder;
nesting box; egg cartons; scales; corn sheller; hay hooks;
antique hand tools; lard press; more.
COINS, COLLECTIBLES
Several years collection of all coins, many silver, paper money;
antique roll top desk, gun cabinet/secretary, 2nd secretary, chair;
vintage oak chests; Aladdin lamp; very large collection of Avon
Cape Cod ruby red glass; lanterns; 2 trunks, re-furbished; pop
bottles & wood cases.
FURNITURE & HOUSEHOLD – misc items not listed.
Dale & Elaine Jackman, owners
Branden Otto, auctioneer 913-710-7111
www.ottoauctioneering.com
8A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
LOCAL
No where else to turn to!
I finished up a new section
of fence just before the ice
storm of 2001. Even though
I trimmed back the trees and
brush a couple of large limbs
fell on the fence and took it
down. So I had to redo the
wires and a few posts. Since
then I have had to rebuilt this
section of fence 5 or 6 times.
For some reason the cattle
will run through this fence,
usually in February. Every
spring I rebuild it, tighten the
wires, straighten the posts
and all is fine. Then some
morning I go down to chore
and a section is torn up.
This is not so different than
what we experience in life.
We are going along fine and
then something happens we
werent ready for and just like
that our life is like that section of fence, torn up. Most
of the problems we get into
through life can be characterized into two categories.
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
Trials or temptations.
James, the brother of Jesus,
addresses this in James 1:2
when he says, Consider it
pure joy, my brothers whenever you face trials of many
kinds, because you know that
the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Initially
this text does not appeal to us
as one we want to embrace.
However this is the only way
God can build our faith. Now
faith is defined as, a belief in
or confident attitude toward
God, involving commitment
to his will for ones life. In
modern times faith has been
weakened in meaning so that
some people use it to mean
self-confidence. But in the
Bible, true faith is confidence
in God or Christ, not in ones
self. We need to get past
thinking that anything we do
can endear us to God. What
would God need me to do for
him? I need God and the only
way for me to understand this
is through trial and error.
If you and I are honest we
will have to admit that we
have met our worst enemy
and the enemy is us, not God.
God uses the misfortunes we
create for ourselves to bring
us to a saving knowledge of
himself. We can ignore Gods
help but sooner or later we
need to come to the realization we dont have anywhere
else to turn except to ourselves. That can never turn
out well since most often we
are the source of the problem.
David
Bilderback:
A
Ministry on the Holiness of
God.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo Submitted
Austin Teter won Grand Champion Market Beef at the 2016 Anderson County Fair with this 1,370
pound Maine steer. He also won Intermediate Showmanship.
Notice to settle estate
(First published in Anderson County Review
September 13, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Norma 0. Croucher, Deceased
Case No. 16 PR 28
(Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59)
L. Croucher, an heir, devisee and legatee, and
Executor named in the Last Will and Testament
of Norma 0. Croucher, deceased. 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.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE STATE OF
KANSAS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo Submitted
These bicycle enthusiasts were part of a group of riders doing a two-day bike trip from Humboldt to
Ottawa and back on the Prairie Spirit and Southwind trails over the Labor Day weekend.
Duplicate bridge played
Patty Barr and Faye Leitch
tied Peggy and Charles Carlson
for the win at the duplicate
bridge match September 7th in
Garnett. Tom Williams and
David Leitch came in third.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all players Wednesdays at 1:00 at the
Garnett Inn.
6×10.5
ach
TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are
notified that on September 2, 2016, a Petition
for Probate of Will and Issuance of Letters
Testamentary under the Kansas Simplified
Estates Act was filed in this Court by Michael
/s/ Michael L. Croucher
APPROVED BY:
Jeffrey A. Wilson, #26527
ANDERSON & BYRD, LLP
216 S. Hickory, P.O. Box 17
Ottawa, Kansas 66067
(785) 242-1234
Jwilson@andersonbyrd.com
Attorney for Petitioner
sp13t3
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary & Birth Announcements Business News
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
1×3
AD
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, September 13
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at home
with Fort Scott
4:30 p.m. – ACHS volleyball at
Santa Fe Trail
5 p.m. – Crest volleyball at
Marais des Cygnes Valley
5 p.m. – Central Heights volleyball
at Mission Valley
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
Wednesday, September 14
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
ACHS FFA Greenhand Conference
at Ottawa
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
3 p.m. – ACHS girls golf at Eureka
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
Thursday, September 15
4 p.m. – Central Heights cross
country at Wellsville
4 p.m. – ACHS cross country at
Parsons Invitational
4 p.m. – ACJH football at Iola
5 p.m. – ACHS volleyball at
Pittsburg-Colgan vs. Girard
5 p.m. – Crest Middle School
volleyball at home with
Yates Center
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
Center
6 p.m. – Crest Middle School
football at home with
Yates Center
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44
Friday, September 16
7 p.m. – Central Heights football
at home with Lyndon
7 p.m. – Crest football at Waverly
7 p.m. – ACHS football at
Santa Fe Trail
Saturday, September 17
8 a.m. – Crest volleyball at
Humboldt Tourney
8:30 a.m. – Central Heights
volleyball at Iola
8:30 a.m. – ACHS JV volleyball at
Santa Fe Trail Invitational
9 a.m. – ACHS freshmen volleyball
at Wellsville Invitational
Monday, September 19
No school, Central Heights
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
1 p.m. – ACHS girls golf at Chanute
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at
Wellsville
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV football at
home with Santa Fe Trail
5 p.m. – Crest JV volleyball at
Humboldt
6 p.m. – Central Heights JV
football at Lyndon
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
6:30 p.m. – Bear (third grade)
Den Cub Scouts meeting
Tuesday, September 20
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School volleyball at Prairie View
4 p.m. – ACHS cross country at
Iola Invitational
4 p.m. – ACJH JV football at home
with Osawatomie
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Its a celebration
in Colony
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Vickie Moss
The Colony Lions Club mascot celebrates after shooting off a confetti cannon at the Colony Day parade Zaden Mellen of Iola picks up candy
tossed during the parade.
Saturday, Sept. 3.
Gunner Ellington of Colony takes a ride down the inflatable water slide.
The Colony Methodist Church entered this float, using the parade theme, Cherished
Memories.
Above, Evelyn Wedeman was Grand Marshal of the parade.
At right, kids wave from the Colony Fire Department truck.
Potato chips have
interesting history
How many of you like to nibble on Potato Chips? Boy, I sure
do. As a world food, potatoes
are second in human consumption only to rice. And as thin,
salted, crisp chips, they are
Americas favorite snack food.
Potato chips originated in New
England as one mans variation
on the French-fried potato, and
their production was the result
not of a sudden stroke of culinary invention, but of a fit of
pique.
In the summer of 1853,
American Indian George Crum
was employed as a chef at an
elegant resort in Saratoga
Springs, New York. On Moon
Lake Lodges restaurant menu
were French-fried potatoes,
prepared by Crum in the standard, thick-cut French style
that was popularized in France
in the 1700s and enjoyed by
Thomas Jefferson as ambassador to that country. Ever since
Jefferson brought the recipe
to America and served French
fries to guests at Monticello,
the dish was popular and serious dinner fare.
At Moon Lake Lodge, one
dinner guest found chef Crums
French fries too thick for his
liking and rejected the order.
Crum cut and fried a thinner
batch, but these, too, met with
disapproval.
Exasperated,
Crum decided to rile the guest
by producing French fries too
thin and crisp to skewer with a
fork.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
The plan backfired. The
guest was ecstatic over the
browned, paper thin potatoes,
and other diners requested
Crums Potato Chips, which
began to appear on the menu
as Saratoga Chips, a house specialty. Soon they were packaged and sold, first locally, then
throughout the New England
area. Crum eventually opened
his own restaurant, featuring
chips.
Americans today consume
more potato chips than any
other people in the world, a
reversal from colonial times,
when New Englanders consigned potatoes largely to pigs
as fodder and believed that
eating the tubers shortened
a persons life–not because
potatoes were fried in fat and
doused with salt, todays heart
and hypertension culprits,
but because the spud, in its
unadulterated form, supposedly contained an aphrodisiac
which led to behavior that was
thought to be life shortening.
Health Services
3×6.5 D I R E C T O R Y
health directory
Eye Care
Pharmacy
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
Rehabilitation
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
To advertise in this
guide, contact Stacey
at The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
M-T-W-F
8-5
SAT 8-10
After Hours By Appt.
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
LOCAL
Visitors from Papua New Guinea at Richmond Community Museum
BY PAT VINING Special to THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Among the nearly 500
visitors at the Richmond
Community Museum this season were the Gail and Scott
Dooley family of Papua New
Guinea. They were attending
a Bennett family reunion next
door and went from there to
the Museum at least partly to
see the display about Gerald
Scoop McLees.
But first, about the Dooleys,
Gail, the daughter of Jim
and Mary Bennett of rural
Princeton, is a 1991 graduate
of Central Heights High School
and a 1995 graduate of MidAmerica Nazarene University,
where she earned her BS
Nursing degree and met her
future husband, Scott Dooley.
He earned his Doctorate of
Medicine from The University
of Kansas and Family Medicine
Residency in his hometown,
Springfield, MO.
Gail was inspired to become
a nurse and help others by a
visiting missionary she heard
at a church service when she
was 16.
While in college she felt the
call to become a medical missionary. Scott had a similar
call for his lifes work. So, in
2003, they and their two older
daughters made the transition
to Papua New Guinea, where
Gail is a surgical nurse. After
being a physician for all needs
for several years, Scott is
now administrator of Kudjip
Hospital, a 130 bed facility
established nearly 50 years ago
by the Church of the Nazarene
which continues to support it.
The hospital serves tens of
thousands of natives who live a
fairly primitive life with 85% of
the population living on subsistence vegetable farming. The
people suffer all kinds of tropical diseases, accidents, animal
attacks, domestic and tribal
violence as well as the usual
diseases and surgeries.
The Dooleys third daughter
was born since they have lived
at this missionary post. The
girls who are now 18, 16 and
11, attend a local school co-op
where they speak English.
However, all family members
also speak Pidgin, a common
trade language.
Paupa New Guinea is the
Eastern part of a large island
to the north of Australia. It
is about the size of California,
with temperatures about 60-80
degrees and is very humid.
Like many missionaries, the
family stays at their assignment for two years, then has
three months at home, where
they make about 50 presentations to Nazarene churches
that help sponsor them, mostly in Kansas and Missouri.
This year will be somewhat
different, however, for their
oldest daughter, Allison, will
remain to attend Mid-America
Nazarene University in Olathe.
Two of their sponsors are the
Nazarene Churches in Garnett
2×2
diy
of the 33 literally pulled to safety. This is still the only successful underwater rescue in world
history, according to newspaper stories written years later
which are in the display.
McLees retired from the
Navy in 1956 and from a second
career in a New Hampshire
shipyard in 1972. Sometime
later a couple of books were
published about the event
and a television movie called
Submerged was popular.
Before his death in 2004 he
was honored as an overnight
guest at the White House and
received considerable publicity since he was one of the oldest
survivors of the USS Squalus
rescue.
The Richmond Museums
display was funded by McLees
daughter who lives in Canada,
and prepared by Marilyn
Bennett, Princeton area, whose
husband Ben is also a nephew
of the honored man.
The Richmond Community
Museum is open anytime on
request, so please call D. Peters
at (785)-835-6107, P. Vining at
(785) 835-6598 or C. Prue at
(785) 433-1926 if youd like to
see the McLees or any of the
other displays and see some
of the thousands of pieces of
archival materials (photos and
stories) about the community.
The Museum will also be open
Saturday afternoon, Nov. 19,
when it will have a chili and
soup supper fundraiser at the
Community Bldg.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Pat Vining
Showing a poster from the Gerald McLees display at the Richmond Museum are three of his great-great
nieces, left to right: Allison, Olivia and Emma Dooley, daughters of Dr. Scott and Gail (Bennett) Dooley.
Their parents are medical missionaries sponsored by the Church of the Nazarene. The Richmond
Museum will open anytime on request for the next several months.
and Ottawa. The Garnett
church will sponsor a 5K run at
the Corn Fest later this month
with part of the proceeds going
to provide medicines badly
Sell stuff with your
own photo contest
These days just about everybody has a camera on his/her
phone, and if youre under the
age of 25 theres a law of the
hip universe that says every
picture you take your friends,
your dog, your omelette, your
dogs omelette MUST be
posted on some form of social
media.
This proliferation of photos
may be really bad when your
prospective employer or mother-in-law runs a Google check
on you, but it can be a huge
bonus for small businesses running sales promotions.
Because most of your customers are carrying cameras
and have immediate access to
their own audiences, theyre a
great opportunity to promote
your brand, special offer, sale
or other promotion. For them
its as easy as clicking and
sharing the trick for you is to
give them ample motivation to
advertise your offer.
The recipe for running a successful photo contest is to 1)
make it easy for the player, and
2) make it worth your players
effort.
Your customer is savvy
about this social marketing
schtick she knows shes
helping you out by taking part
in your game and promoting
you/it to her friends, so your
reward to her has to be worth
her while. It helps if your contest rewards her with cool
as well as cash or something
similar.
The cool has to do with the
subject for instance, people
love their pets doggies, kitties, ferrets, anacondas what
have you and they already
love to post pictures of them.
Have them shoot a picture of
their pet standing in front of
your store, or your billboard,
or your print ad, or maybe
needed at the Kudjip Hospital.
The Dooleys are very grateful
for this assistance. You can
read more about their ministry
at the hospital website www.
nazpng.org .
At the Richmond Museum,
they studied the display about
Jim Bennetts uncle, Gerald
Scoop McLees, the son of
Mason and Allie McLees, who
joined the Navy after graduating from Richmond High
School in 1934. By 1939 he was
an Electricians Mate 3rd Class
aboard the submarine UJSS
Squalus and became one of the
first sailors heroically rescued
from the submerged submarine.
A new device, the McCann
Diving Bell, made four trips in
48 hours to rescue 33 sailors on
the USS Squalus which went
down for its 19th test dive but
failed to surface. Sadly, 26 men
perished, but McLees was one
HOW TO SELL STUFF
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×12.5
biz directory
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
Sales & Service
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery M-F
BECKMAN MOTORS
Dane Hicks
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Review Publisher
even with a logo-emblazoned
bumper sticker from your company and post it on Facebook,
Instagram or Twitter to enter
the contest. Resist the urge to
make the photo subject directly relative to your business;
the more common the subject
the better. General photos of
peoples pets, kids, cars, etc.,
always work well.
Your challenge is to figure
out a way to work your product or service into the photo
in a simple but very visible
way. One example I saw from
a micro brewer was pet photos
with someone holding a labeled
bottle of the beer in the frame
not complicated, but it worked!
Back to the reward again,
the more general the better.
Our company has done it with
event tickets, even straight up
cash, although you can use gift
certificates, store credit, etc.
Hint do more than one prize,
so more players have a chance
to win.
So be just a little creative
and then make it simple and
your photo contest can help
you sell stuff!
Dr. Scott Dooley and Gail (Bennett) Dooley pose with an afghan
with the official U. S. Navy seal that belonged to Gails great-uncle,
Gerald C. McLees. The Dooleys are medical missionaries at Papua
New Guinea where they serve a hospital provided by the Church
of the Nazarene.
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
E-Statements &
Online Banking
The TV Shoppe
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Mon – Fri
8:00am
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Millers Construction, Inc.
Anderson
County
News
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson County
Review. Comments or questions
may be directed to him at review@
garnett-ks.com or (785) 448-3121.
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Has Your Foundation Let You Down?
Serving your area since 1969
Waterproofing Epoxy Injection
Straighten & Stabilize Walls
Solid Piering & Leveling
TAYLOR BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION
Foundation Repair Residential and Commercial
785-242-7477
Ralph Taylor Ottawa, KS
To advertise in this
directory contact Stacey at
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
3B
LOCAL
Ideal weather, crowd, organizers helped make Colony Day a success
Calendar
Sept. 14-Rural Water District
No. 5 board meeting, board
office, 8 p.m.; 14-County bus
to Iola. Phone 24 hrs. before
you need a ride 785-448-4410
any weekday; 19-Seekers Not
Slackers 4-H Club, Lone Elm
Community building, 7 p.m.
Meal Site
14-baked ham, cheesy potatoes,
Tuscan veggies, bread, juice,
16-chili, coleslaw, crackers, cinnamon roll; 19-beef stew, cottage cheese, crackers, peaches.
Phone 620-852-3457 for meal reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented Sept.
4 was John 16:4b-33. Pastor
Andrew Kolls sermon Take
Heart.
Sept. 11– Church potluck
dinner at City Hall community room following church services.Everyone is welcome.
Our missionary from Brazil,
Phil McAfee, will attend. Sept.
14-Working Wonders CWC, 7
p.m.All women are welcome.
Cross training Classes at 9:30
a.m. each Sunday. Mens Bible
Study-Tuesday morning, 7 a.m.
UMC
Scripture presented Sept.
4 at the United Methodist
Church was Psalm 139:1-6, 13-18
Jeremiah 18:1-11, Philemon
1:1-21 and Luke 14:25-33.
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, Focus
on Discipleship: Count the
Cost. The United Methodist
Womens September Challenge
is Lap Blankets.
Citywide Yard Sales
City-Wide Yard Sales have
been scheduled for Friday,
Sept. 30 and Saturday, Oct.
1.Please contact 620-852-3321 or
email colonygaragesales@hotmail.com for more information
and to register your sale for the
list and map.The list and map
helps visitors find each sale. It
would be beneficial to have a
lot of yard sales so we encourage and welcome all homes to
participate.
Yard sales are a great fundraiser for any school clubs/
class and church groups.
Anyone is welcome to have a
sale so feel free to contact email
address with any questions. We
strive to have as many sales as
possible so a great turnout of
shoppers can attend.
GAPP Project
This summer more that
240 teens and adults from 14
youth groups from 10 states
painted, built wheel chair
ramps and rebuilt porches in
Garnett and four surrounding
towns. At Colony they helped
with two houses. This was the
second visit by teens from the
Colorado-based Group work
camps ministry. And this year
as earlier announced in Colony
items they also brought schoolsupplies for Crest and other
schools. They camped out at
the Anderson High School, left
from there each morning to go
to the other towns to work for
the day.
Colony Day Parade
Ideal weather for the 2016
Colony Day Parade. Large
crowd and a good parade!
The Grand Marshal Evelyn
Wedeman looked so lovely and so graciously waved
at the crowd. Her grandson
Mark Wiley was the driver and
Cindy Sommer, granddaughter accompanied her. Evelyn
has seven other grandchildren,
19 great grandchildren and 29
great great grandchildren. Her
daughter Donna Powell lives
one block from her.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo Submitted
Open House, August 31, in Crest High School Auditorium. New teachers, from left: 4th spot: Joe Moore
teaches 7-12 business, 5th spot: Dr. Morgan Menefee teaches high school English, 7th spot: Austin Lee
teaches Social Studies (half-time), 10th spot: Hannah Bloehmn teaches Vo-Agriculture. Not pictured
are Wendy Conley who teaches pre-kindergarten, and Blake Swanson who teaches Social Studies.
Winners of the large float
in the Cherished Memories
Parade
were
1st-Future
Farmers of America: 2nd-Jolly
Dozen Club; Mini float-1st-Colony High Point 4-H Club;
2nd-Colony Lions Club and
Judges Choice (can include
any entry in the parade). FirstEd and Nancy Ellington and
their grandchildren-accompanying Nancy in the parade were
Karley, Lizzie, Rucker, Lane,
Genner, Nash, Gracy, Aubrey,
Jaylee and Layla. Nothing
more special than time with
our grandkids was the sign;
Second-Randall Beckmonand
third-Robert Messenger and
his Oliver Tractor 77.
School entries included
Crest FFA, Crest High School
Football team, Crest Band
(6-12 grades), Crest Cheer
Team, Anderson County High
School Marching Band; Colony
Lions Club followed by Golf
cart with AL Richardson,
Lions president, ColonyKincaid Fire Dept., Anderson
County Ambulance, Anderson
County Law Enforcement,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Mary A. Luedke
Auburn Pharmacy, Mirza
Jolly Dozen Float, 20th Annual Colony Day Parade. The club has entered a float in each Colony Day
Shrine Oriental Band, TLC
Parade. They have had a lot of fun putting each of them together. Their Precious Memories show some Auto, Garnett, Carla Griffith
samples of their past floats. Pictured on float are Marilyn Thexton, Debbie Wools, Dixie Ward, Beth for State Senate, Kansas State
Nichols, Phyllis Luedke, Cathy Allen, and Sadrie Overall. They placed second in large floats this year.
Representative
Candidate,
Doug Walter, Phyllis Gettler
for
Anderson
County
Clerk, Kevin Jones, Kansas
Representative 5th District,
Senator Caryn Tyson, Senate
District 12, 1955 Chevrolet
Nomad, 1956 Chevrolet 3100
Pickup, 1967 Ford Farlain 500
with Ethel Beckmon passenger former Colony residents of
38 years, 1964 Ford Econoline
4xx, 1944 Oliver Tractor, 77 RC,
1956 Oliver 77 Row Crop, 1068
International Harvester 806
Farmal, Jones Family, Mattie,
McKenna Krenna and Shane
on horses , Doug, Margaret,
and Ty Chambers, Candy,
Brooke and Kent on horses.
Baskets, Cookies and Cookie
Jars
Twenty-three
baskets
entered, most expensive basket
went for $100 (thanks to everyone who donated a basket and
who also stuck around after
the parade to have fun and bid)
also had 11 cookie jars.
Best tasting cookies-1st
place-Hannah Ray (Jeanie
Rays granddaughter) peanut
butter oatmeal chocolate chip
cookies, 2nd place-Blaine Kingpeanut butter cookies, 3rd
place-Delores Strickler-chewy
walnut brownies.
Best decorated cookie jars1st place-Denise King Gone
Fishin tackle box with fishshaped sugar cookies, 2nd
place-Mary Scovill Colony
Bear Cubs bear-shaped mascot
with orange and black school
colors, 3rd place-Brooklynn
Jones C is for cookie filled
with M&M candies. Winners
received new cookie sheets/
cookie turners/spatula and a
homemade potholder.
Organizers
appreciate
everyones hard work and
dedication to this community
project and willingness to work
with us and the new schedule
this year.
Around Town
About everyone felt the
earthquake in Colony a little
after 7 a.m. on Colony Day.
At several homes people were
shook up before they got up
from the nights sleep. Others
felt and noticed it in several
ways. It really shook our storm
door entry from carport. We
thought it was going to fall out!
It shook up dishes, etc. in hutch
and moved pictures around.
Lasted two minutes however it
seemed like 3 or 4 minutes.
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday 9am
Wednesday 7:30pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
6×12
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School 9am
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
church directory
Morning Worship 10:00am
Evening Worship 6:30pm
Wednesday Service 7pm
(785) 448-3208 258 Park, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Phil Rhoades
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Elder Planning Specialists
Annuities
Medicare Supplement
Long Term Care
Scott D. Schulte CSA
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th Garnett
340 E. South St.
Richmond, Kansas 66080
(785) 835-6135
Hwy 59 at Hwy 31 GARNETT
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3558
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
LWML 2nd Sunday 11:30am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ervin A. Daugherty Jr.
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9 am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9:28 am
Sunday Worship 10:28 am
Childrens Church 10:30 am
Wed. Evening Bible Study 6:28 pm
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Mike Farran
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm, Youth Mtg. 7pm
Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ron Jones
BEACON OF TRUTH
Saturday Sabbath Worship 9:30am
Saturday Evening Service 6pm
(except 4th Saturday)
Wednesday Evening Prayer Svc. 7:00pm
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Andrew Zoll
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 10am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Pastor Chris Goetz
Children & Youth Pastor – Brett Hartman
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – David Hill
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15am
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am/Thurs 7pm
Chancel Bells Wed 6pm
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
Jr. & Sr. UMYF Sundays
U.M. Women 1st Wednesday
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
Reverend – Bill Driver
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:45am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
Pastor – Butch Ritter
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
GREELEY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship 9am
Bible Study (Teens, Adults) 10am
Sunday School (Children) 10am
204 N. Main, PO Box 37, Greeley, KS 66033
(913) 755-2225
Pastor – Bill Driver
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 448-3947
1300 & Broomall Rd, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Vernon Yoder
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 8:30am
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
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Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Heating &
Air Conditioning
(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Sunday School 9:30am
Worship Service 10:30am
2nd & Pine, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Cody Knapik
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
For additions, subtractions or changes to your
church information, a church official may
contact the Review at (785) 448-3121.
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
LOCAL
Anderson County High School Central Heights High School Crest High School
2016 FALL SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo courtesy Rockers Photography
2016 Anderson County High School Football – Front row, from left: Hunter Hill, Josiah Torres, Ryland Wright, Matt Gilkey, Soloman Kinder, Jacob Allison, Raven Maley, Landon Lyons, Jayden Jarret, Lane
Freeman, Austin Edens, Morgan Kropf, Gavin Wolken; second row: Dallas Higginbotham, Joe Finley, Garrett Edens, Mason Roberts, Zach Wilper, Logan Allen, Dominic Sutton, Ridge Pracht, Austin Adams,
Corey Bowen, Lane Palmer, Will Mechnig, Guy Young, Nick Lybarger, Tanner Spencer; third row: Bronson Sparks, Tyler Winterringer, Sebastian Weaver, Tatem LeBlanc, Asst. Coach Marty Alley, Head Coach
Greg Welch, Austin Akes, Kyle Lamb, Adam Kropf, Asst. Coach Bob Risch, Asst. Coach Matt Stevenson, Asst. Coach Tim Bremerman, Dalton Duke, Briley Wolken.
Small senior class leads Bulldog football
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A hard playing, tough
young Anderson County Bulldogs
football team will be looking to build
off last years 5-4 regular season
record and a highlight knock-off of 3rd
ranked Santa Fe Trail at home, 22-20.
It will be especially challenging
considering the team only has three
seniors on a team comprised of 36
members. A whopping 22 of them are
freshmen.
Lost to graduation was a vast majority of the offense with quarterback
Jacob Rundle, running back Chase
Ratliff and receiver Devin Katzer all
gone.
Chase Ratliff was one of the leaders for the Bulldogs on both sides of
the ball with 1,489 yards rushing and
18 touchdowns. Ratliff amassed 1,985
all-purpose yards on the season and
20 total touchdowns. Ratliff was also
second on the team with 63 tackles.
Rundle and Katzer connected for
most of the yards through the air.
Rundle had 600 yards passing on the
season with 409 of those yards going to
Katzer.
Grady Schuster will also be missed
as he registered 50 tackles and led the
team with 4 sacks last year.
Seniors Kyle Lamb, Adam Kropf,
Austin Akes and Dallas Higginbotham
are expected to be leaders to help this
years young team grow.
Head coach Greg Welch, now in
his 3rd season with the Bulldogs and
35th season overall coaching, expects
junior Dalton Duke and freshman
Dallas Higginbotham to be among the
key players heading into the 2016 season.
Welch knows the competition will
be extra difficult this season, especially with so many freshmen being key
contributors.
We only have 3 seniors so many
freshmen are starting. Sometimes up
to 5 freshmen will be starting for us,
head coach Welch stated.
Welch added, One of our strengths
is that we play hard. We have a great
group of young kids. The challenge is
to play so many young kids against
senior dominated teams like Prairie
View.
2×2.5
rockers photo
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo courtesy Rockers Photography
2016 Anderson County High School volleyball – Front row, from left: Audrie Goode, Adrian Gwin, Samantha Nickell, Alexey Lickteig,
Jasmine White, Freshman Coach Jan Phelps, Head Coach Suderman, JV Coach Alaina Fairbanks, Katelyn Alley, Emily Fritz, Madison
Martin, Gabby Spring, Lexee Feuerborn; second row: Kylee Rogers, Maggie Price, Abbie Fritz, Jayda White, Ashley Lickteig, Holli Miller,
Tatum Ahring, Katelyn Renyer, Lakin Katzer, Zee Sommer, Jenna Schmit, Kate Dieker, Cami Burns, Caitlin Weirich, Waltham Farren, Sarah
Quinn; back row: Kaylee Lamb, Grace McAdam, Jessica Akes, Kennedy Blome, Brooke Schettler, Lilly Spring, Baylee Blaufuss, Ali Owens,
Micci Aldrich, Linda Lattimer, Kassidy Mader, Alyssa Mesaros, Jaxcen Farren, Jenna Fritz, Hailey Gilbert.
Athletic Bulldogs volleyball seek return to state
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT What can the 2016
Anderson County Bulldog volleyball team do for an encore
following a 30-10 record last
season followed by their 12th
trip to the state tournament?
Coach Glenn Suderman just
wants his girls to be competitive in every match and prepare themselves for sub-state.
Coach Suderman has been
patrolling the sideline for 32
seasons as a head coach, beginning his career at Hillsboro
high school before coming to
Anderson County. Suderman
currently sits with the 13th
most victories as a volleyball
coach in the history of Kansas
high school volleyball. He
enters the year with 699 career
wins.
The Bulldogs have four varsity players returning from last
season.
Senior setter Katelyn Alley
is in her 2nd year playing var-
2×4
Auburn
sity. Last season she had 1030
sets and 350 assists.
Katelyns leadership will
be important to the team,
Suderman stated.
Alexey Lickteig, also a
senior, is also in her 2nd season
on varsity. Lickteig compiled
34 ace serves last year and her
strong defensive play resulted
in 315 passes and 203 digs.
In her 4th varsity season,
senior Madison Martin will be
patrolling the front row as a
blocker to stop the opponents
top hitters. Martin recorded 23
kills and 83 blocks last year.
The last of the four returning varsity players, senior
Jasmine White enters her third
season of varsity play. White
recorded 52 aces, 25 kills, 469
passes and 265 digs last year.
Suderman dubs her an all
around, high energy player.
Audrie Goode, junior, will
be in her first season on the
varsity team.
She excels at defense and
will be wearing the black libero
uniform which allows her to
play back row positions and
serve, Suderman said.
Senior Emily Fritz will
bring much needed height, hitting and blocking which will be
important to the teams front
row play.
Samantha Nickell and
Adrian Gwin, both seniors,
will strengthen the Bulldogs
with Nickells hitting skills and
Gwins front row play and serving ability.
Juniors Gabby Spring and
Lexee Feuerborn both have all
around abilities in every skill
area that make them available
to play all positions.
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1508 Hwy. 59 114 E. Central 500 Lincoln St.
(785) 448-5138 (913) 856-8809 (785) 937-2260 (785) 835-6562 (785) 489-2231
Proudly supporting all organized
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Call-ins Welcome!
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Monday-Friday 9-6 / Saturday 9-5
www.FrontRowSportsKS.com
frontrow97@att.net
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
5B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo courtesy Rockers Photography
Anderson County High School girls cross country. Front row, from left: Tiffany Mills, Paige Rupp,
Maya Corley, Danielle Mills; back row: Coach Everett Cox, Lizzy Comfort, Shylie Scheckel, Emma
Porter, Adri Pedrow, Averi Wilson, Coach Mike Sibley
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo courtesy Rockers Photography
Anderson County High School girls golf. From left: Miranda Akes, Abbey Barnes, Coach Nicole
Wiehl, Sydney Holloran, Sammy Jo Walter.
Bulldog girls golf team has
high expectations for 2016
BY KEVIN GAINES
GARNETT The Anderson
County girls golf team is small
on numbers, but expecting big
results this season.
Head coach Nicole Wiehl
returns for her ninth season
and is looking forward to working with her experienced group
of girls.
There are only four girls on
this years team, but all of them
are past letter winners. Seniors
Miranda Akes, Abbey Barnes
and Sydney Holloran will be
teaming up with sophomore
Sammy Jo Walter to form a
solid foursome.
Building off last seasons
results will be important. This
group finished in the top 3 in 5
of the 8 tournaments they competed in, including one first
place finish and a second place
finish.
We finished 4th at the
Basehor-Linwood tournament
with a team score of 387. It was
one of the best scores Ive had
since coaching, head coach
Wiehl stated. It was good for
just a fourth place finish but
the top three teams were 5A
and 6A schools.
It is a very tough schedule
this season for the AC golfers.
Three of the tournaments will
be against 5A and 6A schools.
They also will face off with
Caney Valley three times, who
are a very strong team.
Our goal for this season
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Photo courtesy Rockers Photography
Anderson County High School boys cross country. Front row, from left: Michael Porrett, Eddie
Gruver, Nate Gainer, Nathan Quinn, Zach Barnes, Nathan Marcinko, Damone Kueser, Harley Maley,
Ryland Porter; back row: Coach Everett Cox, Russ Peterson, Mason Shriber, Hunter Crane, Josh
McAuley, Trevor McDaniel, Jacob Skedel, Kass Allnutt, Owen Lutz, Coach Mike Sibley.
ACHS girls cross country aims
for 10th straight League title
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT The Anderson
County girls cross country
team and league championships have gone hand in hand
for the past 9 years, but youth
will make it a tough challenge
to make it 10 in a row.
We are young and I expect
to see great strides from the
girls as the year progresses,
said 11th year head coach Mike
Sibley.
Sibley added, We have
never lost a girls league championship since the formation of
the Pioneer League and these
girls do not want to be remembered as the team that ended
the streak.
On the boys side, their
strength is in the 17 runners
they have competing. Four of
the top five runners have lots
of varsity experience as well.
In addition to the league
championship last year, the
girls had three 2nd place finishes, two 3rd place finishes
and one 4th place finish.
Last season the boys had one
1st place finish, three 2nd place
finishes and four 4th place finishes. This includes a 2nd place
finish in league and a 4th place
finish at regionals.
The girls are trying to
replace Gwen Sibley, last
years Bulldog of the Year and
a 1st team all leaguer. They
also need to replace four second team all league runners in
Maddie Goode, Paige Scheckel,
Remi Hedges and Bel Sibley.
Junior Averi Wilson will
lead the returning girls this
We are True Fans of our youth and
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the Value of our area athletes!
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
season.
Wilson has to show good
leadership for us to make it
10 in a row as league champions, Sibley said. First team
all league runner Tiffany Mills
and second team all league
Paige Rupp should also be
important players in our success by being strong leaders
and examples to the younger
girls, he added.
Tyler Jumet is lost to graduation on the boys team. He was
first team all league last year.
The key for the boys will
be running as a team. Trevor
McDaniel, Josh McAuley and
last years Bulldog of the Year
winner, Owen Lutz, should all
lead the way with a host of
young runners not far behind,
Sibley said.
Proudly Supporting our area youth!
2×2.5
r&r equip
is to place in the top 3 in at
least 6 of the 8 regular season
tournaments. We also expect
to medal as a team at regionals
to advance to state where we
would like to place in the top
5, Wiehl said.
Each and every girl on the
team is essential to the success of the team, Wiehl stated.
The most obvious weakness is
only having four players on the
team. That leaves us vulnerable to poor scores that five and
six member teams can exclude
from official scoring, Wiehl
added.
The numbers leave little
margin for error. It takes four
girls to be able to compete at
the team level, so any health
issue or injury will make it
impossible to place as a team.
Walter finished 13th at State
last year as a freshman, so
Coach Wiehl is expecting her
to parlay that success and experience to an even better sophomore season.
Abbey, Miranda and
Sydney have three years of
competition under their belts
so they should know how to
keep their emotions in check
and put the team in a strong
mental state of mind to compete. Golf is, after all, a more
mental than physical sport,
Wiehl said.
Wiehl also added, These
girls know what is expected of
them and it is reflected in their
dedication. All four of them
work so well with each other.
We have great team chemistry.
The Anderson County girls
home tournament is October
3rd at the Garnett Country
Club beginning at 1:00 pm.
Proudly supporting our
2×2.5student athletes.
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Come
see whats new and different at
421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues. – Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2
785-448-3038
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114 E. Brown St. Greeley, KS 785-867-2600
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6B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Seniors lead Lady
Lancers volleyball
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Kevin Gaines
2016 Crest volleyball. Front row, from left: McKenna Hammond, manager, Karlee Hammond, Jewel Armstrong, Ridley Black, Regan
Godderz, Makayla Jones, Breyanna Benjamin, Anna Hermreck, manager, and Charvelle Peterson; back row: Vicky Rodriguez, Kim
Lansdown, Cassie Bowen, Miranda Golden, Katie Brewer, Laurel Godderz, and Camryn Strickler.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY Abigail Hermreck,
in her 4th season leading the
Lancers, is happy with the effort
her girls have been putting in
over the offseason and early on
in practice, and are looking to
improve on their 5-25 record
from a year ago.
I am proud of the effort the
girls have been putting in all
summer and this season, head
coach Hermreck said. We are
going to continue to push the
girls to work hard and improve
every day. The potential is there
to make history for Crest.
Hermreck has a great outlook
for the program, but also realizes that the key is to strive for
improvement. She wants her
girls to improve on last years
record and advance in post-season play.
Seniors Miranda Golden,
Karlee Hammond and Laurel
Godderz along with junior
Makayla Jones and sophomores
Camryn Stricker, Cassie Bowen,
Breyanna Benjamin and Regan
Godderz are all returning letter
winners from last year.
Two seniors received league
accolades last season. Golden
was a first team all-league setter
and Hammond was honorable
mention as an outside hitter.
With four freshmen lettering
last season, one of the toughest
things to overcome is the mental
aspect of competing.
Our weakness is the mental
toughness through rough spots,
Hermreck said. We are working
on keeping our heads up and
pushing through. But the team
has some solid bright spots too,
she said.
We are able to run an offense
this year and play really well for
periods of time. We have more
presence at the net and can pull
together and play as a team.
Crest Lancers football
team lacks experience
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Kevin Gaines
2016 Crest football. Front row, from left: Austin Hendrix, Bryce Atzbach, Jerrick Jones Tayvn Springston, Greg Hardwick, Kanon
Coberley, Ryan Culler, Nik Peterson; back row:Preston Utley, John Hartman, Brendon Hammer, Kadyn Utley, Hayden Seabolt, Austin
Louk, Caleb Stephens, Gage Adams. Not pictured: Jordan Hendrix.
Congratulations to all
players, coaches and families!
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY Head Coach Chuck
Mahon has his hands full in his
3rd season leading the Crest
Lancers football program. Only
two returning starters, both
offensively and defensively,
return from last seasons 6-4
squad.
Mahon, who has been coaching high school sports since 1992,
has an 11-8 record in his two seasons at Crest.
Last season, Crest won their
opener then went on to drop
their next three games to fall to
1-3. Five straight wins followed
the losing streak, which catapulted them into the 1A DII playoffs, but a 72-44 loss to Caldwell
left a bad taste in their mouth
after a successful season.
Gone to graduation are
Hunter Frazell who had 25 receptions and 12 touchdowns on the
season, Evan Godderz and his 17
touchdown passes and Brandon
Brallier and his 608 yards rushing and 6 touchdowns. Brallier
also led the team with 119 tackles
defensively.
The team will be looking at
Gage Adams, the top returning
rusher and tackler, as well as
Hayden Seabolt as top returning
receiver and defensive back, to
help transition 6 new starters on
both sides of the ball.
Crest opens the season at
home against Blue ValleyRandolph before road games at
Marmaton Valley and Waverly
to close out the first third of the
season. Next up is a home contest against Chetopa, then a road
trip to Altoona Midway before a
home game against Greenfield,
Missouri. The last third of the
season has home contests against
Marais des Cygnes Valley and
Pleasanton sandwiched around
a road game against Lebo.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
7B
LOCAL
Vikings looking to rebound
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Kevin Gaines
2016 Central Heights Football. Front row, from left: James Jones, Cameron Hampton, Ethan Shields, Tyler Wilson; second row: Ryder
Roll, Chad Hibdon, Chaz King, Devon Weber, Kyler Brotherton, Seth Burroughs, Brec Furst; third row: Nathan Wiltsey, Jayden Lee,
Matthew Cubit, Colin Maloney, Danny Kirkland, Joshua Bom; fourth row: Jonathan Fox, Tim Smith, Abby Brown, Austin Coffman, Josh
Thompson, Jimmy Goracke, Colin Haynes.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND The Central
Heights Vikings football upperclassmen are no strangers to
change as Rich Mobley takes
over as their new head coach
this season. This will be the
third coach in the past three
seasons for the Vikings.
Mobley is also no stranger
to being on the sideline. He has
coached for over 40 years at
a number of different schools,
including being an assistant
at the college level with the
Ottawa Braves.
He inherits a team that was
winless last season, but that
hasnt deterred their attitudes
on the field.
Our strength is our team
unity and commitment,
Mobley stated. These kids
want to do things correctly and
succeed. They have each others backs.
The players dont only have
to adjust to a new coach the
school has moved to the Flint
Hills League from the Pioneer
League, which Central Heights
helped establish in 2005 in a
smaller-school exodus from the
Frontier League.
Its a new league so Im
not familiar with the teams.
Mission Valley looks tough, but
when you look at the schedule
each week will be a challenge
and an opportunity, Mobley
said.
One of the teams biggest
weaknesses heading into the
season is just a lack of numbers. The squad has just 24
players of which 14 are sophomores or freshmen.
We must remain healthy
or we could have some real
challenges, Mobley added.
Health and how we respond
to adversity will be the keys
to our success. We are young
and inexperienced, so we must
grow up quickly.
Mobley isnt concerned
about effort with his team.
These kids will compete
and get better. That is all the
coaches can ask of them, he
stated. Our kids are hungry
and committed to getting better
each day.
The Vikings will lean heavily on a few players for leadership and production. With such
low numbers, most all players
will be pulling triple duty by
playing offense, defense and
special teams.
Senior Ethan Shields will
be the Vikings running back,
linebacker and kicker. Tyler
Wilson, senior, and Brec Furst,
junior, will lead the lineman on
both sides of the ball.
Also mentioned were senior
Cameron Hampton and juniors
Seth Burroughs, Devon Weber,
Kyler Brotherton and Chad
Hibdon. They are all expected
to provide key roles both offensively and defensively.
Experienced Vikings have
high hopes in volleyball
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Kevin Gaines
2016 Central Heights Volleyball. Front row, from left: Megan Davis, Tancy Goodwin, Taylor Crisler, Sarah Bell, Seanna Hale, Kinsey
Laird, Tess Cotter, Abby Meyer; second row: Hannah Jumet, Trinity Bogle, Riley Roll, Shelbi Hettinger, Hannah Savage, Paige Stockard,
Olivia Stockard, Charlize Robertson, Alysa Wiederholt; third row: Asst Coach Jennifer Bell, Madison Bridges, Darbie Lear, Layla Bones,
Emily Hermreck, Peyton Brockus, Jessica Asbury, Cyla Gardner, Taylor Jilek, Shelbie Miller, Hailee Riemer, Sophie Morris, Caitlyn
Thompson, Asst Coach Shelbye Fish, Head Coach Cadi Marcum.
Vikings cross county teams numbers improving
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND When 2nd
year head coach Troy Prosser
returned to within just 15 miles
of where he ran cross country
and coached as an assistant for
6 years at Ottawa University,
the Central Heights cross country team had just 5 members
and overall numbers were
dwindling even at the middle
school level.
Fast-forward just one year
and the future is already looking bright for the Vikings cross
country team.
The high school squad now
has 14 members and the middle
school team has 15 members.
Sam Skeet is the only one of
the five members of the high
school team last year that will
not be returning.
Senior letterman Sarah
Wood returns and was the only
girl on last years team. The
three boys that lettered last
year and that are returning are
juniors Kyle Cardin and Matt
Ashwill along with sophomore
Caleb Meyer.
Cardin finished 69th at state
last year as he will head a
group that won 44 medals, had
9 all-league performers, 2 all-area performers and an all-region
performer.
Unfamiliarity makes it difficult to know where the Vikings
will stack up as they are joining the Flint Hills League.
Going into a new league,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Kevin Gaines
2016 Central Heights Cross Country. Front row, from left: Alex Cannady, Caleb Meyer, Bryce
Sommer, Matthew Ashwill, Tyler Stevenson, James Little, Avery Stalford; back row: Mason McCurry,
Sam Wood, Coyd Gardner, Landen Compton, Kyle Cardin, Sarah Wood. Not pictured: Tony Kirkland.
I am unfamiliar with most
schools and their success in
the past. We are excited to join
and look forward to doing our
best to compete with the best
the Flint Hills League has to
offer, head coach Prosser said.
Prosser sees his team having
much larger goals than just on
the course while they are running.
The goal is to make weekly
improvements, compete with
a high degree of character and
build a stronger team for the
Our youth are our future.
We support all activities that promote
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development of our youth.
school and communities that
make up Central Heights, he
stated. All of the runners,
regardless of age or classification are key to our success as a
program.
The Vikings have just
enough experience returning
that they will rely heavily on
them to help all the youth.
There will be six freshman and
nine 6th graders adjusting to
their new levels of competition.
Roster
Senior Sarah Wood
Juniors Matt Ashwill, Kyle Cardin,
Coyd Gardner, James Little
Sophomores Caleb Meyer, Bryce
Sommer, Sam Wood
Freshman Alex Cannady, Landen
Compton, Tony Kirklan, Mason McCurry,
Avery Stalford, Tyler Stevenson
8th Graders Orvel Broce, David
Craft
7th Graders Taryn Compton, Alexis
Haynes, Rylee McCurry, Lily Meyer
6th Graders Lydia Burbank, Max
Cannady, Jacey Clancy, Erykah Haynes,
Emma Jumet, Jessy Stalford, Anneleese
Thao, Carson Wood, Chloe LaDuke
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BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND The Central
Heights Vikings have six letter winners returning from
last seasons team that finished
18-19, but entering a new league
it will be a season full of question marks and new experiences.
Head coach Cadi Marcum
returns for her 4th season
leading the Central Heights
Vikings. Previously, Marcum
was a coach for Blue Valley
South West for two seasons.
Marcum has an experienced
squad that is laden with upper
classmen. The entire roster
is comprised of juniors and
seniors, which includes five
seniors and a junior, that lettered last season.
Lost to graduation last year
is Regan Markley. Markley
will be tough to replace as she
played varsity for all 4 seasons.
The team worked very hard
last year despite lacking the
heavy hitters that have the
ability to knock someone over.
They countered the lack of hitting with hustle and by never
giving up, winning their opening game in sub-state before
bowing out in 3 games to the
top ranked 3A team in the state.
It was great to see how far
they came as players and as
a team, head coach Marcum
stated when acknowledging
how much the team improved
from the opening day of practice.
With the uncertainty of
being in a new league, Marcum
seems mostly unfazed.
To be honest I really have
no idea what our competition
looks like, Marcum said. The
way that I try to coach is by
teaching my players how to be
good fundamentally and if we
get that accomplished I can get
them to adapt to any situation
or team we face.
Senior setter Sarah Bell is
one of the returning letter winners that will be relied on this
season.
She has done a great job
at her position and helps run
the court really well and works
extremely hard. She has no
give up in her, which I love
to see. Shes very coachable,
Marcum stated.
Outside hitter Seanna Hale,
senior, is a solid player that has
a lot of hustle, but at the same
time is a positive person that is
very respectful.
Junior Shelbi Hettinger is
the teams libero.
She did an incredible job
last year and continues to get
better every day, Marcum
added. Shes that player that
can frustrate a hitter. She
comes out of nowhere to dig
the ball.
Kinsey Laird and Tess
Cotter, both seniors, are both
middle hitters. They are continuing to grow and learn as
hitters and did a great job last
year and really stepped up.
Senior Abby Meyer has been
injured early on this season,
but Marcum stated the importance of her to this years team.
She is the person who keeps
everyone calm and positive on
the court. Shes great to have
on the court and to have as
your teammate, Marcum said.
Marcum emphasized her
teams strengths are hustle and
playing smart. She teaches her
players to realize their weaknesses and make up for it by
giving maximum effort in the
areas her squad is good at.
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8B
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 13, 2016
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Dane Hicks
Central Heights Viking Matthew Cubit preps for a block against Eurekas Devon Weber Friday night in the 3A matchup. The Vikes led 14-6
when the game was called at halftime due to lightning. The wrap-up was set for last night.
Bulldogs football team loses opener, 26-24
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Failed extra point attempts on
four Bulldog touchdown runs were the difference in the game when AC fell to Prairie
View 26-24.
The Anderson County Bulldogs comeback bid fell just short against the Prairie
View Buffaloes after falling behind 26-12
early in the 3rd quarter.
Trey Isenhower opened the scoring for
the Buffaloes with a 1-yard touchdown
plunge to take an early 7-0 after the extra
point, but the Bulldogs answered immediately when Kyle Lamb took the ensuing
kickoff 98 yards to cut the lead to 7-6 after a
failed 2-pt conversion attempt.
The first quarter fireworks continued
with ACs Austin Adams hauling in a
50-yard touchdown reception from Lamb.
Another failed conversion made the score
12-7. Isenhower finished out the first quarter with a 5-yard touchdown run and failed
extra point to give the Buffaloes a 13-12
lead.
Prairie View quarterback Allan Ewalt
scored the second periods only points on a
4 yard run. The Buffaloes scored their third
unanswered touchdown with a 12-yard run
by running back Trevor Hoover. After
another failed kick the score was 26-12.
Lamb accounted for his 3rd and 4th
touchdowns of the game with a 2-yard run
in the third quarter and a 1-yard run in the
fourth to cut the lead down to 26-24.
Both teams relied heavily on the run.
The Buffaloes rushed for 277 yards and
had just 20 yards through the air. AC ran
the ball 36 times for 125 yards on the night.
Lamb led the way for the Bulldogs offensively with 205 all-purpose yards. Lamb
also had a hand in all four Bulldog touchdowns.
Bulldogs Individual Statistics
PASSING Lamb 1-1 50 yds 1 td, Kropf 1-7
11 yds 1 int, Roberts 1-2 0 yds
RUSHING Lamb 21-57, Kropf 9-55, Duke
2-17, Edens 1-3, Spencer 1-0, Roberts 2-(-7)
RECEIVING Adams 1-50, Spencer 2-11
TACKLES Akes 8, Duke 8, Lamb 8,
Spencer 6, Pracht 6, Kropf 6, Winterringer 4
Crest football team rolls in opener, 40-16
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY The Randolph Blue
Valley Rams traveled nearly 3
hours to take a 40-16 romping
by the Crest Lancers in their
season opener.
Gage Adams opened the
scoring with a 62 yard scamper
to open the scoring and give the
Lancers an early 6-0 lead. The
Rams answered quickly with
a 65 yard touchdown pass and
converted the 2-point conver-
sion to go ahead 8-6.
The long touchdowns continued with Adams breaking
off another long run, this time
48 yards for the score. Once
again the conversion failed and
the Lancers held a 12-8 lead.
The lead was stretched to
14-8 following a Lancer safety
heading into halftime.
Adams would go on to score
3 more touchdowns in the second half. A 64 yard run, a
fumble recovery in the endzone
and a 10-yard run to end the
scoring in the fourth quarter.
He finished the game with 264
yards on just 21 carries and 4
rushing touchdowns and led
the way defensively with an
impressive 18 tackles, including 3.5 quarterback sacks on
the night.
Nik Peterson chipped in
with 30 yards on 6 carries and
had a 12-yard touchdown run
in the 3rd quarter.
Defensively there were a
number of good performances. Tayvn Springston had two
interceptions, Austin Louk had
9 tackles and John Hartman
had 8 tackles and a sack.
Head coach Chuck Mahon
wasnt completely happy with
the way his guys played but it
is always nice to open the season with a victory.
We didnt play as well as
the score indicated, but we had
some great performances,
Mahon stated.
Bulldog runners compete at Wamego
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WAMEGO Averi Wilson took
an overall second place finish with 20:28 last week at the
Wamego invitational to lead
the AC finishers.
Girls
Varsity
Averi Wilson – 20:28 2nd (Medal)
Paige Rupp 24:17 74th
Maya Corley 24:46 78th
Shylie Scheckel 26:41 99th
124 runners
JV
Lizzy Comfort 28:05 43rd
Danielle Mills 28:10 46th
Emma Porter 28:39 54th
106 runners
Boys
Varsity team 17th out of 24 4A teams
Trevor McDaniel 19:15 55th
Owen Lutz 19:40 74th
Damone Kueser 20:07 88th
Kass Allnutt 20:31 108th
Nathan Marcinko 20:34 111th
Mason Shriber – 21:08 124th
Ryland Porter 21:24 127th
149 runners
JV
Nathan Quinn 20:21 8th medal
Russ Peterson 21:43 41st
Harley Maley 22:22 55th
Michael Porrett 24:04 109th
Jacob Skedel 24:06 111th
Vikings Cross Country At Lyndon
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
MELVERN The Central
Heights Vikings cross country
team competed at the Lyndon
cross country invitational at
Melvern Lake. The top varsity finisher was Alex Cannady,
who finished in 11th place in
the boys 5K run.
Results:
Varsity Boys 5K
Alex Cannady (11th) 20:32
Matt Ashwill (23rd) 21:59
Caleb Meyer (25th) 22:03
Bryce Sommer (34th) 23:30
JV Boys 5K
Tyler Stevenson (3rd) – 21:45
James Little (13th) 24:05
Sam Wood (15th) 24:29
Mason McCurry (16th) 24:53
Tony Kirkland (17th) 24:57
Landen Compton (21st) 26:11
Coyd Gardner (31st) 34:09
8th Grade Boys 2-mile
Orvel Broce (2nd) -13:48
Golfer Barnes finishes
second for Bulldogs
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
KANSAS CITY The Lady
Bulldogs golf team finished second as a team at the KC-Piper
Invitational Tournament and
had 3 of their 4 golfers finish in
the top 10 overall.
Abbey Barnes was in a
3-way tie for second with a two
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round total of 99. Erika Ingold
of Spring Hill finished in first
with a score of 93.
Sammy Jo Walter (105) finished in 6th place and Sydney
Holloran (109) finished 10th to
round out the top 10.
Miranda Akes finished in
19th place with a score of 119 on
the afternoon.
David Craft (14th) – 16:26
7th Grade Boys 1-mile
Jessy Stalford (8th) 7:21
Max Cannady (10th) 7:30
Carson Wood (16th) 7:57
7th Grade Girls 1-mile
Taryn Compton (3rd) 7:10
Alexis Haynes (7th) 7:34
Rylee McCurry (13th) 8:14
Erykah Haynes (18th) 8:28
Chloe LaDuke (25th) 9:26
Jacey Clancy (26th) 10:02
Lydia Burbank (30th) 11:29
Emma Jumet (32nd) 11:38
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Eddie Gruver 26:44 147th
178 runners
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-13-2016 / Dane Hicks
AC running back Kyle Lamb struggles for control of a screen pass
Friday night during Garnetts game with West Franklin. Threatening
weather shut the game down early, but AC picked up a 26-0 win.
Lady Bulldogs split
home triangular
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT AC split matches with Nevada, Mo., and Fort
Scott last week.
The Bulldogs started strong
in the opener against Nevada
and pushed the contest to three
sets 25-18, 16-25, 14-25. AC lost
its first set against Fort Scott
24-26 but came back to win the
next two 25-12 and 25-19.
Lexee Feuerborn led the
servers on the day with five
aces. Emily Fritz led all hitters
with 14 kills and also added six
blocks. Samantha Nickell had
11 kills and Madison Martin
added three.
Katelyn Alley had 39 assists
in the two games and Jasmine
White had 15 digs to lead the
Bulldog defense.

