Anderson County Review — September 18, 2018
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 18, 2018. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
O N E M E A S I LY U . S . D O L L A R
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
The official newspaper of record for Anderson County, KS, and its communities.
www.garnett-ks.com |
September 18, 2018
SINCE 1865 152nd Year, No. 44
(785) 448-3121
| review@garnett-ks.com
Contents Copyright 2018 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
See Yoder, Kurtz,
Franklin Co. auctions
on pages 6B & 7B.
Get your Bulldog
Spirit Banner in
todays paper.
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AC B
ulldo
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E-statements & Internet Banking
Anderson County
photo contest
winners announced.
See page 1B.
Member FDIC Since 1899
Four Sudden impact
lanes
or
bust
Hart says helmet saved
him in areas third recent
deer/motorcycle crash
BY DANE HICKS
City signs on with
coalition seeking future
4-lane on U.S. 169
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT City commissioners in Garnett last week officially signed on to a regional
effort lobbying to win funds
to upgrade U.S. Highway 169
to four lanes running from
Osawatomie to the Oklahoma
border.
City manager Chris Weiner
had previously discussed
meetings on the 169 Corridor
Coalition which have been in
process since early 2017. Cities
and transportation-related
industries along the route
have been organizing since
that time, in hopes of successfully lobbying for part of a federal infrastructure investment
package they believe will eventually be forthcoming from the
Trump Administration and
made available by the Kansas
Department of Transportation.
The resolution of support
from the City of Garnett commits the city in principal to
the lobbying effort but does
not require any type of initial
financial commitment. Weiner
said the effort hoped to get
similar resolutions from each
community along U.S. 169
This will be a huge economic boon to Garnett and all the
communities along the route,
Weiner said. If Coffeyville
ever does get Tyson to build
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Troy Hart credits his
motorcycle helmet with saving his
life in a bike/deer collision that
severely injured him August 25
near Goodrich.
Hart, the lead supervisor in the
City of Garnetts electrical distribution department, is recuperating
at home with a broken scapula, broken collarbone and 10 broken ribs.
His broken helmet is now on display at the Paola American Legion
Post, and its making believers out
of other motorcyclists who have
traditionally opted against the
added protection in favor of comfort, freedom and some say better
visibility. Now, better than three
weeks after the crash, Hart can
actually laugh about it.
Its a lot easier to get one (a
deer) with a bow or a rifle, he said.
Its a lot less painful.
Hart and riding partner Ron
Young were just west of Goodrich
on 1700 Road shortly after 8 a.m.,
running about 55-60 mph and
headed to meet Legion Riders in
LaCygne for a charity ride when
the deer bounded into the roadway. Hart said Young, who was
riding behind him, told him later
the animal made two leaps from
the hedgerow, to the ditch, to Harts
lane. Hart said he was told he never
lost consciousness, but he doesnt
remember the impact or immediately afterwards.
I remember riding east of
Garnett and getting close to
Centerville and thinking I need to
be watching (for deer), and then
the next thing I know Im coming
to Research Medical Center.
He said his condition improves
every day, but doctors initially estimated eight weeks for recovery.
Harts crash is the third involving local motorcyclists and deer
this summer. Charles Nixon of
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-2018 /
Photos submitted
Troy Harts head was shielded from the
impact with the pavement by his motorcycle
helmet after he collided with a deer at about
55-60 mph during a ride August 25.
rural Garnett struck a deer July 6 near
Selma and was severely injured but survived while wearing a helmet. Bill and
Diane Wilper of Garnett were also injured
when their bike hit a deer on U.S. 169
near Osawatomie August 2. A 41 yearold Dallas, Texas, man was killed June
SEE CRASH ON PAGE 2A
SEE 4-LANE ON PAGE 2A
(785) 448-3111
GPD still
short officers
Chief says city is near having
to reduce services if department
loses another police officer
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT The Garnett Police Department
continues to have trouble hiring to fill two
vacant officer positions, and GPD Chief
Kurt King told city commissioners recently
the shortage is near the point of affecting
local police coverage.
Kings report to last weeks city commission meeting said the department had
received 21 applicants for the positions, six
of which were immediately disqualified
due to criminal history involving a felony or domestic battery. Seven applicants
were sent the background packet on the
positions to continue the selection process,
King said. Out of those none had completed and returned the packets to arrange
interviews, nor had they returned emails
or phone calls to determine if they had any
interest in continuing the process.
This is leaving us with us with little to
no option but to start looking into unqualified applicants, King told commissioners.
If GPD loses one more officer, services
will have to be cut by the department in
order to maintain the normal day-to-da
functions of a Police Department.
Police departments across the country
have been pressed with recruitment and
retention problems in recent years, particularly since an improving economy has
grown opportunities in other industries
and public sentiment in some quarters has
shifted against police in view of several
high-profile incidents of alleged racism and
abuse of power.
What in the world is happening? said
commissioner Greg Gwin during discussions at Tuesdays meeting, noting 15 applicants for initial positions but none followed
through. Is our process too time consuming?
City manager Chris Weiner said the
GPDs screening process was actually less
extensive than some other neighboring
departments, but competition for a dwindling pool of potential officers had the city
coming up short.
Were competing for a select few that
want to be officers, Weiner said. Weiner
said staff discussions had focused on
expanding retirement benefits from KPERS
SEE POLICE ON PAGE 2A
Trace Adkins headlines Cornstock Saturday
GARNETT Cornstock Concert
On The Hill welcomes
Trace
Adkins
with Josh Abbot
Band
and
Restless Heart
this coming
Saturday, Sept.
22 for the 14th
year in whats
become
one
of
Eastern Kansas
most popular
music events.
The annual event began in 2005
and celebrates corn and those
who feed and fuel America.
The celebration of the areas agricultural heritage began
from an idea to hold a
festival after the launch
of the investor drive
that eventually built the
East Kansas Agri-Energy
ethanol and renewable diesel plant in Garnett.
The event culminates the efforts
of more than 100 local volunteers who contribute time
each year to help with
the organization and
labor required to pull
off the multi-act show.
The event is funded by
sponsors, by beer sales
at its beer garden, by
food vender registration fees and by ticket
sales. Proceeds are
aimed at securing
and marketing next
years show, and the
organization offers
annual scholarships
to students who have
been former event volunteers.
The event focuses regional attention
on Lake Garnett Park as ground zero
for the performances. Campers will be
arriving in Garnett on Friday, September
21st. Community Development Directory
Susan Wettstein said last week self-sustained or tent camping is all that is available now. Reservations are required for
campsites and can be made until Friday
at 3 pm. by contacting Garnett City Hall,
785-448-5496.
This year the Long Cedar Disc Golf
Club will be hosting a disc golf tournament to raise money for their proposed
youth disc golf course to be installed at
the Garnett Elementary School. Golfers
will meet and register at the toad stool
adjacent Lake Garnetts dam. Shotgun
start at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday, September
22nd. Persons entering the tournament
may purchase concert tickets for $20. This
is the only option to purchase discount
tickets and you must enter the disc golf
tournament to get the discount. Regular
tickets are $40.
This years lineup at the Cornstock
Concert on the Hill features headliner
Trace Adkins, with opening acts the Josh
Abbott Band and Restless Heart. Gates
open at 3:30 p.m. for VIP and then 15
minutes later for everyone else. The
Rickerson Pipe Lining Spotlight Stage
will host The Lost Troubadours at 3:30
SEE ADKINS ON PAGE 2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-2018 / KEVIN GAINES
A large crowd witnessed the Anderson County Fair concluding
as the Diamond E Bucking Bull presented Midwest Mayhem on
Saturday night at the Fairgrounds.
Custom printed balloons, wall plaques, rubber stamps – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SENIOR CENTER BIRTHDAYS
The Garnett Senior Center will
celebrate September birthdays
on Wed. Sept. 19.Entertainment
will be Larry & Waunita Porter at
11:15 a.m. Anyone 60 or older
is invited to attend. If you plan
to eat please call the day before
785-448-6996. Cost of meal is a
$3.50 donation.
HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE
Garnett BPW will be holding
the Holiday Boutique during the
Garnett Librarys Homes Tour
this year. The Boutique will be
held December 2nd from noon
to 4pm at the Kirk House. Please
register your booth as soon as
possible due to limited space.
Looking for another eventful boutique, come join the fun. Call
448-8745 or 433-1054 to reserve
your booth.
DURABLE MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT DONATION
DRIVE
If you have unneeded equipment taking up space, ATK-KEE
Resue Program accepts donated equipment that can be refurbished to high quality standards
and then given, free of charge,
to Kansans with disabilities and
health conditions who need
them.
Donations such as manual
& power wheelchairs, scooters
and power operated vehicles,
communication devices, home
care beds, patient lifts, shower
chairs, standers and gait trainers and walkers with seats and
handbrakes are just some of the
items that will be accepted.
Items can be donated on
Friday, October 19 at the Garnett
Senior Citizen Center located at
128 W. 5th Ave. in Garnett from
10:00 a.m. – 3 p.m. For further
information please call (620)
421-6551 or to arrange a pick up
call (785) 448-6996.
SUICIDE AWARENESS
GROUP 1ST TUESDAYS
SAM – Suicide Awareness
Members, a division of SASSMoKan – meets on the first
Tuesday of the month from 6:307:30 at the Garnett Library located at 125 W 4th Ave in Garnett.
The facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols,
who may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas
VINE:
Victim
Information
&
Notification
Everyday (KS-VINE), is an automated victim notification service.
Kansas VINE is free and anonymous and provides victims of
crime and the general public the
ability to search for an offender housed in a county jail and
receive notifications.
1×2
AD
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
MEETING, SEPTEMBER 10, 2018
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM on
September 10, 2018 at the County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Jerry Howarter, Present: David
Pracht, Present: Leslie McGhee,
Present. The pledge of allegiance
was recited. Minutes from the previous meeting were approved as presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor,
met with the commission. He
informed the commission that he has
a mechanic that is quitting and will
not hire for that position immediately.
The road supervisors truck hasnt
been working properly and took it
to Beckman Motors to be looked
at. They can repair the truck for
approximately $4,600 or put in a new
motor for $5,500. The commissioners would like for Lester to do more
research on the issue and the cost to
repair.
Public Comment
Richard Reed, Harris, met with
the commission. He questioned the
commission on whether the County
has an inspector of homes being built
in the county. He believes his house
wasnt built to code but the county
does not have a code inspector.
Being that the county doesnt have
a set of codes it reverts back to the
current State of Kansas codes.
BG Consultants
Dan Harden and Eric Hethcoat,
BG Consultants, met with the commission. Discussion was held on the
elevator project. The county will be
receiving bids on September 26th to
start the process.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM due
to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
Thomas Blair Egbert and Nancy
Ann Egbert to Eugene P. Owen
Trustee, Eugene P. Owen Trust dated
12-3-2007, Weta M. Owen, and Weta
M. Owen Trust dated 12-3-2007:
Beginning at the northwest corner
of the northwest quarter of 25-21-20
being marked with a 1 square iron
bar. Thence north 875039 east
536.11 feet to a iron bar on the
north line of said northwest quarter.
Thence south 005305 east 814.95
feet to a iron bar. Thence south
881559 west 536.04 feet to a
iron bar on the west line of said northwest quarter of Section 25. Thence
north 005305 west 811.00 feet to
the place of beginning containing
10.00 acres more or less.
Russell M. Miller to Megan Barton
and Chance Slaughter: Lots 11 and
12 in Block 6 in the South Addition to
the City of Kincaid.
John R. Miller and Margie Miller
to Dudley R. Feuerborn and Carole
Gibb: Lot 6 in Block 6 in the Parklane
Addition (1970 revised) to the City of
Garnett.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Tyler Scott Lupton, Tonganoxie,
has filed a Petition for Divorce against
Jamie Lee Lupton, Tonganoxie.
Divorce granted September 10.
Austin Duron Sanders, Kansas
City, Mo., has filed a Petition for
Divorce against Elisia Jarrell
Madison, Junction City. Divorce
granted September 11.
STATE TAX WARRANTS FILED
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a state tax warrant
against Galen P. Wilson, Garnett,
and Melissa D. Wilson, Garnett, asking $476.52 for the tax years of 2016
and 2017.
LIMITED ACTION CASES FILED
Allen County Hospital has filed
suit against Max Efinger, Westphalia,
asking $919.46 plus interest and
costs for services provided.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Russell E. Prater, Greeley, has
been charged with domestic battery.
Albert Eugene Thacker, Jr.,
Garnett, has been charged with
aggravated domestic battery, criminal
threat, and criminal restraint.
TRAFFIC CASES FILED
Stephan Lecole Newman has
been charged with failure to register
a vehicle, $168.
Teresa I. Blazek has been charged
with speeding 84 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $207.
Moriah Cassandra Miller has been
charged with speeding 80 mph in a
65 mph zone, $183.
Christopher M. Belcher has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a
65 mph zone, $153.
Ronald Lynn Rife has been
charged with speeding 72 mph in a
55 mph zone, $195.
Evan Lawrence Dean has been
charged with speeding 73 mph in a
55 mph zone, $201.
April Jean Thompson has been
charged with speeding 92 mph in a
65 mph zone, $276.
Robert Glenn Holding Jr. has been
charged with speeding 88 mph in a
65 mph zone, $240.
Anne Cloud Vance has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a
65 mph zone, $153.
Christopher Michael Maples has
been charged with speeding 75 mph
in a 65 mph zone, $153.
Chelsey Madilyn Henry has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a
65 mph zone, $153.
Eldon Jay Stutzman has been
charged with speeding 83 mph in a
65 mph zone, $201.
Ryan P. Holton has been charged
with speeding 84 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $207.
Tanner Scott Lickteig has been
charged with failure to obey the basic
rule governing the speed of vehicles,
$183.
David W. Secrist has been charged
with failure to yield at a stop or yield
sign, $183.
GARNETT POLICE DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On September 6, Russell Prater,
Greeley, was arrested for aggravated domestic battery and criminal
restraint.
On September 8, Stephanie
McNeill, Garnett, was arrested for
driving under the influence of alcohol
or drugs.
On September 9, Albert Thacker,
Garnett, was arrested for aggravated domestic battery, criminal threat,
interference with a law enforcement
officer, and criminal restraint.
On September 11, Alek Mansfield,
Paola, was arrested for possession
of drug paraphernalia.
GARNETT POLICE DEPARTMENT OFFENSE
REPORTS
On August 13, Emily Peine,
Garnett, was the victim of theft and
burglary. Handcuffs and foam were
stolen, valued at $40.
On August 14, Desteny S.
Hutchison, Garnett, was the victim of
theft. A mini bike was stolen, valued
at $150.
On August 16, Candi L. Coulter,
Garnett, was the victim of criminal
damage to property. A window screen
was damaged, valued at $10.
On August 24, Cynthia Rollings,
Deer Park, Tex., was the victim of
criminal use of a financial card and
theft. Cash in the amount of $500
was stolen.
On September 3, Haley Prater,
Garnett, was the victim of burglary
and theft. A pink wallet, two credit
cards, a Patriots Bank checkbook,
and miscellaneous items and papers
were stolen, valued at $11.
On September 10, Joshua Pate,
Garnett, was the victim of criminal
damage to property. Four tires were
damaged, valued at $368.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On September 7, Jeremy Lee
Spurlock, Linn Valley, was arrested
for a probation violation.
On September 7, Edward Daniel
Miller, Topeka, was booked into jail
as a hold for the Douglas County
Sheriffs Department for identity theft.
On September 7, Andrew Shane
Hiesberger, Lawrence, was booked
into jail as a hold for the Douglas
County Sheriffs Department for
aggravated arson.
On September 7, Gabriel Frederick
Sosman Bernhardt, Lawrence, was
booked into jail as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriffs Department
for a probation violation.
On September 7, James Allen
Gibson, Westphalia, was arrested to
serve a court sentence.
On September 10, Nathaniel
Andrew Twohearts, Lawrence, was
booked into jail as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriffs Department
for a parole violation.
On September 10, Isaac Lee
Mundhenke, Ottawa, was arrested
for a probation violation.
On September 10, Matthew Job
Daly, Garnett, was arrested for failure
to appear.
On September 10, Steven
Christopher Mayes, Garnett, was
2012 Ford
F-150 Lariat
2015 Chevrolet
Sonic LS
5×5
42,300 Miles,
Automatic
Transmission,
Beckman
Bluetooth for Phone,
4G Wi-Fi Hotspot
$9,900
$8,400
2008 Chevrolet
Uplander LS
86,500 Miles,
3.9L V6,
Cruise Control,
Tow Package,
Power Locks
and Windows
arrested to serve a court sentence.
On September 11, Anthony Jamal
Demby, Lawrence, was booked into
jail as a hold for the Douglas County
Sheriffs Department for failure to
appear.
On September 11, Sheree Marie
Garrison, Tonganoxie, was booked
into jail as a hold for the Douglas
County Sheriffs Department for a
probation violation.
ANDERSON COUNTY ACCIDENT REPORTS
On August 25, a vehicle driven by
Eric Clayborne, Kansas City, Mo.,
swerved to miss a deer, rolled, and
struck a group of trees while southbound on Highway 169.
On September 7, a vehicle driven by Stacy Smith, Iola, had pulled
over on the shoulder of Highway
169 due to emergency vehicles
approaching when a vehicle driven by Jacob Heard, Protem, Mo.,
crested a hill and wasnt able to stop
in time to keep from striking Smith.
He swerved to miss her vehicle, but
struck the corner then proceeded
down the embankment and into a
flooded ditch.
On September 7, a vehicle driven
by Shane Audley, Kansas City, Mo.,
hydroplaned while southbound on
Highway 169, entered the ditch, and
drove through a fence.
On September 7, a vehicle driven
by Tanner Lickteig, Greeley, entered
a flooded area on Trego Road and
was swept 40 feet off of the roadway. The driver and occupants
escaped the vehicle and the vehicle
was recovered after a Water Rescue
Team determined that the vehicle
was unoccupied.
On September 10, a vehicle driven
by Harold Gilbreth Jr., Kincaid, struck
a deer while northbound on Texas
Road.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Zachary Kirkland was booked into
jail on April 30, 2018.
Curtis Dean was booked into jail
May 10, 2018.
Tyler Craft was booked into jail on
July 27, 2018.
Betty Moore was booked into jail
on July 30, 2018.
Amos Miller was booked into jail
on August 13, 2018.
Shemiah Forester was booked
into jail on August 24, 2018.
Brian Moore was booked into jail
on August 29, 2018.
Dillon Tomblin was booked into jail
on September 4, 2018.
Steven Sinclair was booked into
jail on September 4, 2018.
Jeremy Spurlock was booked into
jail on September 7, 2018.
Isaac Mundhenke was booked into
jail on September 10, 2018.
Steven Mayes was booked into jail
on September 10, 2018.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
ROSTER
Wayne Benedick was booked into
jail on December 7, 2017.
Jimmy Miller was booked into jail
on January 5, 2018.
Christian Seagren was booked
into jail on May 1, 2018.
Virginia Seagren was booked into
jail on May 1, 2018.
Jacab Reafleng was booked into
jail on April 30, 2018.
Gary Wade was booked into May
4, 2018.
Caleb Wood was booked into jail
on June 26, 2018.
James Sullivan was booked into
jail on July 5, 2018.
Joshua Knapp was booked into jail
on July 24, 2018.
Jeremiah Wallace was booked into
jail on August 8, 2018.
Darron Bland was booked into jail
on August 22, 2018.
Charles Fitzgerald was booked
into jail on August 20, 2018.
Brian Brown was booked into jail
on August 22, 2018.
Anthony Williamson was booked
into jail on August 20, 2018.
Savannah Capp was booked into
jail on August 20, 2018.
Randy Johnson was booked into
jail on August 27, 2018.
Stephen Hudson was booked into
jail on August 28, 2018.
Norman Goodmoney was booked
into jail on August 27, 2018.
Jonathan Herrick was booked into
jail on August 23, 2018.
Jason Allen was booked into jail on
August 31, 2018.
Adam Reeves was booked into jail
on August 30, 2018.
Jacci Hays was booked into jail on
August 31, 2018.
$26,400
$14,900
61,500 Miles,
3.5L V6 Ecoboost,
Heated/Cooled
Front Leather
Bucket Seats,
Chrome Running
Boards, 18
Chrome Wheels
2016 Chevrolet
Malibu LTZ
63,250 Miles,
Leather Seats,
Heated Front Seats,
Power Driver Seat,
Bluetooth,
Remote Start
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Nathaniel Twohearts was booked
into jail on September 10, 2018.
Gabriel Sosman was booked into
jail on September 7, 2018.
Fredrick Kessay was booked into
jail on September 4, 2018.
Edward Miller was booked into jail
on September 7, 2018.
Andrew Heisberger was booked
into jail on September 7, 2018.
Anthony Demby was booked into
jail on September 12, 2018.
Sheree Garrison was booked into
jail on September 12, 2018.
$24,400
FROM PAGE 1
to the police & firefighters
specific KP&F, but KP&F is
extremely expensive, Weiner
told commissioners.
Officers in Garnett currently earn $15-$16 per hour, chief
Kurt King said.
4-LANE…
FROM PAGE 1
there, I think they can be a
huge player in getting some
resources thrown to 169.
Weiner said organizers of
the coalition are warning participants the process will be a
marathon, not a sprint.
Highway 69 from Kansas
City to Pittsburg was two lane
and they fought for 40 years
and they finally got it. It may
take us 40 years, Weiner said.
Should the lobby efforts of
the coalition move into the proposal stage, Weiner said the cities along the route would most
likely be asked to come up with
some form of matching dollars to supplement state/federal funding for construction.
Analysts estimate the cost to
construct the four-lane project
along the 120-mile section from
Coffeyville to Osawatomie
would run $10 million per mile.
Weiner said the signed
resolutions of support would
become part of the coalitions
database of support and would
be used in the groups sales
pitch to KDOT officials and
state legislators who may eventually determine parameters of
available funding.
CRASH…
FROM PAGE 1
1 when his bike struck a deer
near Meriden.
Statistically most deer collision fatalities more than
70 percent according to bikersafe.com are those involving
motorcycles.
Experts say preparation is
really the most effective means
of surviving a deer/motorcycle encounter. Helmets and
safety gear increase survival
odds exponentially. Bikesafer.
com recommends covering
the brakes poising the right
hand over the front brake handle and the foot over the rear
brake pedal can cut reaction
time when traveling through
wooded areas and areas with
thick cover close to the road.
Keeping your eyes moving and
being extra vigilant in those
areas may give the extra second
or half second to avoid a collision, and slow down in cover
areas or at times from dusk
until dawn when deer are most
active.
As for helmets, Hart said the
incident made a believer out of
him.
Ive always tried to wear
a helmet but I havent always
worn one, he said. Im definitely seeing the value of wearing one all the time now.
ADKINS…
FROM PAGE 1
p.m. Vendors and exhibitors
will keep concert goers busy
until the 5:00 p.m. presentation
of the National Anthem and
the start of main stage activities. Restless Heart will take
the stage at 5:30 p.m. The Josh
Abbott Band will perform at
7:00 p.m., followed by Trace
Adkins at 9:00 p.m. (all times
subject to change).
Tickets are available at over
30 outlets in 20 cities or online
through TicketWeb.com. For
more information see pages
3B-5B in todays Review or go
online at www.Cornstock.net
or www.accornfest.com. Social
media – @accornfest. Questions
can be directed to the Garnett
Area Chamber of Commerce
by calling 785-448-6767.
You Name It, We Print It
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785 448 3121
112 W. Sixth Ave. Garnett, KS 66032
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(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
ZENTNER
RAY
SOUDERS
NOVEMBER 29, 1927 – SEPTEMBER 14, 2018
George Eugene Zentner, age
90, of Garnett, Kansas, passed
away on Friday, September 14,
2018.
He was born on November
29, 1927. George was born to
John and Nora (Rudisill)
Zentner.
On August 19, 1950, he and
3A
REMEMBRANCES
Jeanine Henry were married,
at Garnett.
Funeral services were
September 17, 2018, at the First
Christian Church, Garnett,
Kansas. Burial followed in the
Garnett Cemetery.
SEPTEMBER 15, 2018
MARCH 17, 1938 – SEPTEMBER 16, 2018
James Patrick Souders,
age 80, of Centerville, Kansas,
passed away on Sunday,
September 16, 2018, at his home.
He was born March 17, 1938
in Kansas City, Missouri, the
son of Harley H. and Mabel
(Duffels) Souders.
Jim married Marianne Geier
in 1960, they later divorced.
Jimmie Blaine Ray, age 75, September 19, 2018 at the
of Scipio, Kansas passed away Feuerborn Family Funeral
He married Linda (Kossow)
Saturday, September 15, 2018.
Service Chapel, Garnett.
on February 11, 2002, in Olathe,
Funeral services will be
Burial will follow in the
Kansas.
held at 10:30 AM, Wednesday, Garnett Cemetery.
Mass of Christian Burial
will be held at 10:30 a.m., on
Saturday, September 22,
2018, at Holy Angels Catholic
Church, Garnett, with burial
SEPTEMBER 25, 1929 – SEPTEMBER 12, 2018
following at the Centerville
Roberta Macklin, age 88, held at 10:30 a.m., on Tuesday,
Cemetery, Centerville, Kansas.
passed away on Wednesday, September 25, 2018, at the
September 12, 2018.
Feuerborn Family Funeral
She was born September 25, Service Chapel, Garnett, with
1929, the daughter of Vernon inurnment to follow in the
and Olive (Teter) Macklin. Rly. Garnett Cemetery. The family
She is survived husband will greet friends at the funeral
home at 10:00 a.m., prior to the
Richard.
A Celebration of Life will be service.
MACKLIN
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ANDERSON
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BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
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DIGITAL COPIERS
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ads@tradingpostdeals.com
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
N. Hwy. 59 Garnett
(785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
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Contact Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
who didnt. In Luke 4:17-21, we
read. The scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed to him.
Unrolling it, he found the place
where it is written: The Spirit
of the Lord is on me, because
he has anointed me to preach
good news to the poor. He has
sent me to proclaim freedom
for the prisoners and recovery
of sight for the blind, to release
the oppressed, to proclaim the
year of the Lords favor. (Isaiah
61:1-2) Jesus then rolled up the
scroll and sat down. He then
said to them, Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.
Time after time Jesus presented himself and the scribes
and the Pharisees missed it.
The very teachers who taught
of the imminent coming of a
Messiah missed it.
Today
preachers stand in pulpits and
preach Jesus Christ, radio and
television broadcasts send the
word around the world and people miss it. I dont know why
people miss it other than the
fact they have other Messiahs
rather than the one true Christ.
In 1st Corinthians 1:18 Paul
says. For the message of the
cross is foolishness to those who
are perishing, but to us who are
being saved it is the power of
God. What is the message of
the cross to you?
Ministry on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback
on Facebook
Obituary charges, policy
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Death notices are published free and include name, date of birth and death,
name of parents, spouse and service information. A photo may be added to a
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In the 5th chapter of John we
read, Some time later, Jesus
went up to Jerusalem for a
feast of the Jews: Now there is
in Jerusalem near the Sheep
Gate a pool which in Aramaic
is called Bethesda and which is
surrounded by five covered colonnades. Here a great number
of disabled people use to lie-the
blind, the lame, the paralyzed.
One who was there had been an
invalid for thirty-eight years.
When Jesus saw him lying there
and learned that he had been in
this condition for a long time he
asked him, Do you want to get
well? (John 5:1-6)
To understand this text we
need to know the significance
of the pool. Periodically the
water would be stirred. It was
the belief of those who were
there that the water was stirred
by an angel of the Lord and
whoever was the first one in the
pool would be healed. In fact
the man answered Jesus question by saying why he couldnt
be healed. Sir the invalid
replied, I have no one to help
me into the pool when the water
is stirred. While I am trying to
get in, someone else goes down
ahead of me.
Everyone who was there was
totally focused on the pool. The
text doesnt say anyone even
noticed Jesus. Then Jesus said
to him, Get up! Pickup your
mat and walk. At once the man
was cured; he picked up his mat
and walked. The text does not
say all of the rest of the people even noticed the man leave.
Why would this be? Jesus himself walked in and among them
and then walked out. They were
focused on their temporary
state. They saw as their salvation the pool. While they were
watching the pool they missed
the Savior.
To me the most important
part of the story is not the man
who got healed but all the people
THE SMART CHOICE
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Garnett, KS
wiseautoks.com
785-448-2171
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PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
Please call 785-448-5931
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Dirty
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Done dirt cheap.
(785) 448-3121
Millers Construction, Inc.
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
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620-363-5005
Emporia Location:
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620-342-5573
Ottawa Location:
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785-229-0684
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We sell & service these
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Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
Providing quality
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Ottawa, KS
Delivery Available. Financing Available W.A.C.
2701 North State St. Iola, KS
620-365-2187 800-367-2187
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TAX-TIME TAX SERVICE, INC.
785-448-3056 415 S. Oak, Garnett
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4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
OPINION
Why Tyson still matters to Kansas
Garnett, Greeley, Osawatomie, Iola and on
do you think you have no stake in the Tyson
Chicken decision that may (or may not) put a
chicken processing plant in Coffeyville?
Think again.
This time last year up at Tonganoxie, the
newly-chartered We Hate Tyson Foods club
was about to tar and feather everybody from
the governor on down for daring to entertain
the companys plan to invest $320 million in
a Kansas chicken plant in a rural area of
Leavenworth County nearby.
Even laid-back Lawrence was up in arms,
spooked that its Free State motif of liberal tolerance might be put to the test if the plant, 10
miles northeast of town and seeking to fill some
1,600 jobs, ended up bringing in loads of Somali
and Mexican/South American immigrants to
fill the jobs and seek housing in Lawrence.
So in the cacophony of protest that drowned
out any positive arguments in favor of the
project, it was easy to get lost in the idea that
Tyson was big and evil, the politicians trying
to seal the deal all needed to be strung up and
no community was better off with the company
than without it.
The reality, of course, was that some people
actually did favor the location of the plant and
they saw the practical economic benefits of
locating it in Leavenworth County. But they
didnt like the idea of walking in the kitchen
one day and finding their kids pet rabbit boiling on the stove.
So Tyson took its scolding and got sent
packing with an eye toward maybe locating in
Coffeyville. Now, the company and its decision
on the plant almost nobody wanted will likely
be a huge factor in a $1.2 billion thats billion
with a b highway project that everybody,
and I mean everybody, in Southeast Kansas is
signing onto with love and kisses.
The U.S. 169 Corridor Coalition is made up
of cities and counties and major private business players along the highway route from
Osawatomie to the Oklahoma border. This
outfit is all about tapping what they hope
will be federal infrastructure improvement
grants coming from the Trump Administration
eventually as part of an infrastructure plan
the president has been promising since his
campaign. That hope and dream is to rebuild
U.S. 169 from a two-lane into a four-lane to
make it safer and more efficient but most
importantly to claim the economic surge that a
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
billion-dollar, multi-year highway project will
bring to the region.
Its a given that coalition organizers will
want to cozy up with trucking companies who
use the 169 route as a thoroughfare to cross
the state to and from Kansas City. Right now,
something like one of every four or five vehicles on U.S. 169 south of Miami County is a big
axel truck. A higher percentage of truck traffic
makes the interests of the trucking companies
the same as those of the nearby communities
when it comes to ease of travel.
Wal-Mart will be a factor, too. Theres a
distribution center in Ochelata, Okla., on U.S.
Highway 75, about an hour from Coffeyville. A
four-lane leg of south 169 would make the K-68
DC at Ottawa just a hop, skip and jump away.
And trucking wouldnt be the end of support
for this corridor work. Think of construction
companies, quarries, fuel and oil sales, motels
to house work crews, restaurants. The benefits
would be widespread. Those dollars would
cycle in multiples several times in all those
affected communities.
Even yet heres a lot that can go this way
or that with Tysons decision but the fact
remains that people are eating increasing
amounts of chicken and Tysons in the best
position to provide it. It is the irony however in
how Tyson was treated a year ago, and how it
will be treated now as a major player in a project that will bring literally billions of dollars in
economic activity if it happens, that seems to
stand out most.
But it may well be Tyson that helps tip the
scale if the project ever comes to fruit showing us what its like to go from heel to hero in a
very short time.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
There were no calls to the Phone forum this week.
A portrait for Greitens?
from The Kansas City Star
Eric Greitens did not deserve to remain in
Missouris top office after credible allegations
of sexual coercion and violations of campaign
finance laws emerged earlier this year.
But the states short-term governor he
resigned in June after only 16 months in
office does deserve to have a portrait in the
Missouri Capitol along with other former state
leaders.
Portraits of past governors hang in an exhibit on the ground floor of the Capitol. Paintings
of the states first ladies are displayed in the
PBMs pocket your prescription drug discounts
The Trump administration has aimed a
dagger at the heart of high pharmacy bills:
the go-betweens in the supply chain that have
been gouging insurers, drugmakers, and consumers.
Through its blueprint to reduce drug spendingcalled American Patients First, the administration invited public comment on the role
of pharmacy benefit managers. These are the
mega-corporations that health insurers hire to
administer their
drug benefits.
If just one-third of
Officials
surely got an earthe total discounts
ful. In their role
as go-betweens,
PBMs negotiate for
PBMs negotiate
big discounts
Medicares drug
from drugmakers. But rather
benefit were passed than passing
those savings on
on to patients at the to insurers and
consumers, they
pharmacy counter,
have found ways
to pocket many
seniors would have
of the proceeds
for themselves.
nearly $20 billion
The sums
involved
are
more in their pockhuge. If just
one-third of the
ets over the next
total discounts
PBMs negotiate
decade.
for Medicares
drug
benefit
were passed on
to patients at the
pharmacy count-
MEDICAL COMMENTARY
PETER PITTS, CFMPI
er, seniors would have nearly $20 billion more
in their pockets over the next decade. The top
three PBMs, Express Scripts, CVS Caremark,
and OptumRx, who together control 75% of
the market, collected more than $10 billion in
profits in 2015.
A recently leaked contract reveals the tactics PBMs use to secure savings for themselves.
First, PBMs tend to hog rebates. Drug manufacturers offer PBMs a percentage discount
or negotiated rebate off a drugs list price.
In exchange, the PBM agrees to cover the drug
under its affiliated insurance plans, thus making it available to more consumers.
The majority of rebate dollars should, in
theory, flow back to health plans. Then the
plans can pass those savings to patients in
the form of lower premiums or out-of-pocket
expenses.
But the leaked contract with Express
Scripts, the nations largest PBM, gets crafty
with its definition of rebate. The contract
carves out so many exceptions to the rebate
that the PBM itself ends up retaining most of
the negotiated discounts for itself.
For instance, PBMs receive extra inflation payments from drug manufacturers
to cover annual increases in a drugs list
price. But these payments are not classified
as rebates. Similarly, PBMs charge drug companies administrative fees, service fees,
and more for their services. But these fees also
arent considered rebates. So PBMs dont pass
them along to health plans.
Second, the document reveals that Express
Scripts uses cryptic algorithms to reclassify generic drugs as brand name drugs.
Drugmakers usually offer higher discounts
for generics than they do for brand drugs. If a
PBM gets a big discount on a generic drug, and
then reclassifies it as a brand drug, it avoids
passing along the full discount to the health
plan its representing. The PBM essentially
buys the drug low, sells it high, and pockets
the excess.
PBMs are knowingly profiting off the backs
of American patients, pharmacists, and innovators. Its time for them to change their shady
practices and pass on discounts to patients.
The sunlight the Trump administration is
calling for will be a great disinfectant.
Peter J. Pitts, a former Food and Drug
Administration associate commissioner, is
president of the Center for Medicine in the
Public Interest.
Economic recovery reaches mainstreet wages, jobs
The economic recovery is really beginning
to reach into Trump country.
The president is famous for his extravagant
promises, involving, invariably, the biggest
and the best. The landscape is littered with
examples, although he never promised to create blue-collar jobs at the fastest clip since
1984, something he achieved in the first half of
2018.
A labor market that has been rocky since
the financial crisis, and hasnt truly delivered for many workers for decades, is robust
enough to reach all corners of the economy,
including Trump areas that have recently
been doing better than other parts of the country.
As the Brookings Institution observes,
goods-producing industries have been surging while services industries have seen their
seasonally adjusted employment growth slow
since 2016. This is good news for smaller,
more rural areas, which are now actually outpacing the growth rate in large urban areas.
According to Jed Kolko of Indeed Hiring Lab,
job growth accelerated between 2016 and
17 in counties that Trump won by at least 20
points.
Several things are going on. As the labor
market has tightened — in June, there were
6.7 million job openings and 6.6 million unemployed Americans — it has benefited workers
down the income scale.
The administration, for its part, has leaned
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
into a pro-growth tax and deregulatory program meant to spur more investment and
remove burdens on business. The goal has
been to defeat fatalist predictions of a secular stagnation that supposedly meant that
we could never realistically expect anything
more than middling economic growth.
At the moment, the warnings are less of
stagnation than of an alleged labor shortage
that, according to CNBC, is nearing epidemic
proportions. This is exactly what we need. As
Josh Barro of Business Insider points out, a
tight labor market puts welcome upward pressure on wages and creates an incentive for
workers to get more training and employers
to provide it.
This dynamic still needs time to take hold.
Wage growth, at least by traditional mea-
sures, has been surprisingly sluggish given
the low unemployment rate (the White House
argues that wages are being mismeasured and
underestimated). But in August, encouragingly, average hourly wages increased 2.9 percent
from a year ago, the biggest increase since
June 2009.
As for training, a report from the National
Association of Manufacturers says that twothirds of manufacturers plan to increase
worker training in the next year. This is so
important because its only possible to achieve
sustainable wage gains by increasing the productivity of workers. And so far, despite the
boom, productivity increases have still been
lagging.
The encouraging news for blue-collar workers is welcome. But we should set our sights
higher. Regaining what was lost in the aftermath of the financial crisis isnt enough. The
national priority should be, as Oren Cass of
the Manhattan Institute argues in his forthcoming book The Once and Future Worker,
returning to a lost golden age of work, when
labor force participation rates and wage
growth were both reliably high.
The implicit Trump pledge in the 2016 campaign was of jobs good and stable enough to
make a decent living and raise a family. That
should never be overpromising in America.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Governors Mansion.
There are no immediate plans to add paintings of
Greitens or his wife, Sheena, to the collections,
officials say. And the disgraced former governor
has effectively disappeared, at least for now.
But eventually, paintings of Greitens and the
former first lady should be commissioned. A
portrait is not an endorsement of Greitens scandal-plagued tenure but merely an acknowledgment of reality.
Greitens was governor. That history cant
be erased. Tradition holds that portraits of
Missouris leaders hang in the Capitol, and
Greitens should be treated no differently…
Letter to the editor
Government invents
problems to solve, because
it cant solve real problems
Dear Editor,
Wonderful editorial on gas cans. My gas cans
are over 20 years old, thus have vent caps. You
take off the vent, open the spout and pour. Works
fine and lasts a looooong time. I went back to my
daughters house in Indiana and battled their
new government reinvented model. Danes
article was kind in its description of using one
of these monsters, and yes, I spilled gas all over
the mower. Of course, fumes from spilled gas are
government approved, while fumes that come
out of the little bitty vent hole, when the cap is
left off, are dangerous.
This article reminded me of the recent State
Fair debate between the candidates for Governor.
Senator Kelly and Greg Orman spent most of
their time telling us how government was going
to reinvent the gas can in all aspects of our
lives. They, of course, did not tell us that they
were going to tax us more so they could hire
more employees to persecute us with their new
gas cans. The problem with government is that
they do not leave our vented gas cans alone. As
Ronald Reagan noted, Government exists to
protect us from each other. Where government
has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves. Government invents
problems to solve, because they have no ability
to solve real problems.
In contrast modern government has implemented the view of Plato, The heaviest penalty
for declining to rule is to be ruled by someone
inferior to yourself. Government today is based
on the principles of the Theory of Evolution, i.e.,
there are superior humans that should tell everybody else what to believe and do. To paraphrase
Ronald Reagan, government does not solve
problems it spends huge amounts of money to
change gas cans.
Respectfully,
Don Small, Burlington
Quotables:
Led Zeppelin has been there
through three generations of teenage angst. And theres a generation
of kids now who wont know it,
post-Linkin Park.
Robert Plant
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., 2018.
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 18, 2018
5A
HISTORY
40 years ago: Series of thefts and break- Old brass key found in local park
ins keep local law enforcement busy
10 years ago…
After 28 years in practice
locally, Dr. David Henderson
will be closing his physicians office effective October
17 and moving his practice
to Mound City and Paola.
The move came as part of a
restructuring of service offerings undertaken by Olathe
Health System, with which
Henderson Practices. Olathe
Health also services Miami
County Medical Center Clinic
in Paola and Mound City
Associates in Family Care.
20 years ago…
The modern popularity of
keeping fish is making a big
splash with a local company
that makes aquariums to fill
the need. After undergoing
a series of management and
ownership changes in recent
years, QualityCraft Molding
in Garnett has found a niche
in the plastic manufacturing
industry by producing their
own line of proprietary desktop aquariums. The item has
been a boom to the local business, and growth appears to
just be around the corner for
THAT WAS THEN
Melissa Hobbs
SEND LOCAL HISTORY PHOTOS, INFORMATION TO
REVIEW@GARNETT-KS.COM
the company.
30 years ago…
Twenty-two
minutes.
Thats all the time it took for
a group of 88 local business
and community leaders to
raise $14,025 for what organizers of the Anderson County
Economic Development committee are calling the most
aggressive step toward economic development to occur
in the countys history.
40 years ago…
A 1978 Chevrolet three
quarter ton pickup was stolen
from Pointers Motors sometime between 3:30 p.m. Friday
and 10 a.m. Saturday accord-
ing to Police Chief Lawrence
Kellerman. Kellerman asked
anyone who sees the truck,
which is silver grey in color,
to call the police department.
The theft of the truck was one
of several incidents that have
had the police busy the past
week. Police are also investigating a break-in at Tri-Ko
apartments, the theft of six
wire-spoke hub caps, and an
incident where a bottle of beer
was thrown through the window of a pickup owned by
Paul Kircher.
100 years ago…
A man cannot afford to
have an enemy, even a humble enemy. The shabby fellow
who storms your office today
may be a power in the community next year. Therefore,
speak to him gently. Send
him away with a smile. Never
affect a contemptuous manner. That is the way of the
fool. A polite word costs nothing. It may turn out to be a
good investment, and it will
never make an enemy.
Four Winds Chapter announces
Junior American Citizen Contest
The Four Winds Chapter of
the National Society Daughters
of the American Revolution
is announcing the Junior
American Citizen (JAC) contest for this year. The contest
is open to all students in preschool through 12th grade. All
students in public, private, or
parochial schools, and in sanctioned home study programs
may participate. All entries
MUST follow the theme and
meet the specifications of the
category entered.
Entries
are judged by grade level and
within these divisions: gifted,
general, and special needs, so
that every child may enter the
contest regardless of ability.
The ability of the student is
never disclosed. Students may
enter more than one contest.
Only one first place entry per
student advances on to the next
level.
The Art Contest includes
four categories: poster, banner, stamp, and photographic essay. A winner will be
selected in each grade level
and category. Students may
compete as individuals only in
the poster, stamp, and photo
essay contests; and in the banner category only groups may
enter, groups being three to
five students. Art generated
on the computer using clip art,
cut and paste technique, or
scanned images is not allowed.
Preschool and kindergarten
students may participate only
in the banner category.
The Creative Expression
Contest includes two categories: poetry and short story.
Students compete as individuals only group entries are
not allowed. Pre-school and
kindergarten students may
not compete in the Creative
Expression Contest.
The Community Service
Project can be either an individual entry for students in
grades 1 12. Group service
project entries can be done by
PK -12th grade. Groups are
not limited in size. A group
service project could be done
by a church youth group, scout
troop, 4-H club, a student council group, an entire classroom,
or any other group.
The 2017 theme is 50th
Anniversary of The Lunar
Landing Americas Great
Move Forward in Exploration
and Technology. This theme
was an exciting time in our
nations history. The feat of
having a man travel through
space, step on the moon, and
return safely to earth was huge.
This event was a gigantic turning point for the United States
in exploration and technology.
The theme allows students to
show how much has changed
from that lunar landing in
the two areas of exploration
and technology. Just to think
that there is talk of vacation-
ing on the moon one day and
today you can explore almost
any place in the world in an
instant. America has definitely changed in the last 50 years!
Everyone in the world has
been impacted by this event.
Be creative and have fun!
The purpose of the Junior
American Citizen Committee
is to help children learn civics, history, love of country,
service and promote good citizenship to every child in the
United States in preschool to
12th grade. Calling all budding
artists and aspiring writersnow is the time to enter this
contest! The contest entries
are all due by November 30th,
2018. Local first place winners
will advance to the Kansas
State Contest and first place
winners of the state will move
on to the South Central Region
(KS, MO, OK, AR, TX, and LA)
and first place winners there
move on to the National level.
Prizes and awards are presented at all levels for all entries.
For more information and
the specific guidelines please
contact: Connie Becker, Four
Winds JAC chair, 785-489-2449
or csbrltiks06@wildblue.net.
All entries will be appreciated and will be returned to the
owner at the end of the contest!
We look forward to honoring
our local, state, regional, and
national winners!
Isnt this a nifty little bottle?
I found it recently at the old
home site Ive been working at
for the last several months.
What stands out about this
bottle is the fancy brass cap
and the fact is the cost of this
cap was probably more than
the glass used in its manufacture.
What was the contents of this bottle? Well,
we really dont know,
however in a 1897 Sears
Roebuck catalog one just
like this one is called,
Homeopathic Medicine
Bottle. They normally
contained pills or discs.
The 1897 advertisement read as follows:
Our
Homeopathic
Specifics are prepared
under the supervision
of an old experienced
DIGGING UP THE PAST
My dad read two newspapers
daily when I grew up in the
50s. His newspapers of choice
were the Kansas City Star and
Denver Post.
Both arrived on the same
day and both contained the latest news from that date in history. The doodlebug or jitney
brought the two papers from
KC 358 miles to the east and
Denver, 255 miles to our west.
We farmed outside the small
Sheridan County community of
Seguin.
For you younger readers,
people called self-propelled railroad cars doodlebugs or jitneys.
Doodlebugs sometimes pulled
an unpowered trailer car but
were often used singly.
They were popular with
some railroads during the first
to middle part of the 20th century. Jitneys provided passenger
and mail service on lightly used
branch lines, often in rural
areas with sparse populations.
By operating these two-car
trains in northwestern Kansas,
the Union Pacific (UP) didnt
need to use conventional trains
consisting of a locomotive and
coaches . Several railroads,
mostly small regional and local
networks, provided their main
passenger services through
doodlebugs in a cost-cutting
effort. This also freed up the UP
to use its locomotives for the
transportation of wheat, milo,
barley and livestock.
Our home was located a little
more than a block north of the
tracks and from the time I saw
my first train, I was fascinated by the sound, smoke and
the sight of these hulking metal
monsters. I couldnt wait to see
them, hear them, count the cars
and eventually ride on one of
them.
Doodlebugs were considerably quieter than the steam locomotives that carried millions
and millions of bushels of grain
from the breadbasket of the
world where I grew up to hungry mouths around the globe.
These two-car trains typically
INSIGHT
Everett Cox.
volunteer nature and his fun
personality. Our community
would not be the same without
him.
The Four Winds Champter
would like to congratulate
Homeopathic physician.
Great care is taken in
preparing them according to the rules laid down
by the highest authorities on homeopathy, and
only the purest drugs
used. Every one of the
bottles have the disease
it is to be used for name
printed on it.
Adults take 6 pills or
discs, children from 1 to 3
according to age, and two
JOHN SCHLAGECK, Kansas Farm Bureau
consisted of a gasoline-powered
engine that turned a generator
and provided electricity to traction motors, which turned the
axles and wheels on the trucks.
The doodlebug that stopped
in our little village, population
50 with dogs and cats, usually
came mid-morning, about 10:15.
Back in those days you could
almost set your watch by its
arrival.
And thats how my dad
received his two daily papers
on the same day. A half century
later after the rail lines were
torn up and steam engines were
a distant memory my dad subscribed to the Salina Journal.
One of his neighbors, Elmer
Reitcheck, subscribed to the
Hays Daily News. After theyd
read their copies, theyd swap.
The funny thing about this is
that Dad and Elmer were now
reading yesterdays papers.
To be more exact, it often took
two days to receive their daily
papers. Thats right. With all
our technology, and lightning
quick U.S postal service, it still
required two days to deliver a
paper 94 and 188 miles.
Talk about old news. You
know the old saying, Thats
a heckuva way to run a railroad. Well, I cant remember
how many times I heard my dad
say, bring back the railroads.
I guess, you could blame part
Delivery Available. Financing Available W.A.C.
2701 North State St. Iola, KS 620-365-2187 800-367-2187
of the demise of todays papers
on transportation and the government, but they both take a
beating daily anyway, so back
to the story of doodlebugs and
those days of yesteryear.
I took one of my first train
rides on a doodlebug. I also
accompanied my dad to see our
relatives in Denver by way of
the Rock Island Rocket. That
was more than 60 years ago
and the 250-mile trip on this
streamliner took less than three
hours. We literally flew across
the plains traveling at speeds
of 90 miles-per-hour in this red
and silver rocket. It takes four
hours to cover this same distance traveling on Interstate 70
today.
For my sixth birthday, I
asked my parents for a train
trip from Seguin to Oakley. It
was a little less than 50 miles by
train and Mom and Dad drove
part of the way beside my sister, Cathy, and me as we dawdled in the doodlebug on our
way to Oakley. This slowpoke
traveled half the speed of the
Rocket maybe less.
During part of the trip the
engineer allowed me to put my
hand on the huge silver, metal
throttle and as I told my friends
later, I drove the doodlebug
part of the way to Oakley.
Bet I couldnt get anywhere
near a train throttle or computer-operated engine room today.
SOPs (standard operating procedure), rules and regulations
being what they are.
Ill remember that birthday
always. And who knows, maybe
one day trains will once again
play a vital role in transportation. One thing is certain, they
wont carry newspapers anymore.
2×3
Yutzy
Everett Cox for embodying the
spirit of this award and thanks
him for his tireless service to
the Garnett community and
the Anderson County area.
Price is good through September 2018
Visit Iola & Allen County!
These4x5.5
Iola and
Allen County
Iola/Allen
Co.businesses
Guide appreciate your patronage
and encourage you to visit your local merchants in Allen County!
Flynn Appliance & Hi-Def Center
11 N. Jefferson IOLA (620) 365-5940
M-F 8-6 / Sat 8-1
Best selection of
Home Appliances.
Flat Panel Televisions
Plasma & LCD
IOLA PHARMACY
109 E. Madison IOLA
(620) 365-3176 or (800) 505-6055
Your hometown full line full service pharmacy.
Free delivery in Iola.
24-hour Prescription Services
VoiceTech Automated Prescription Refill Service
DTI
Diesel & Turbo of Iola
2×2 OMalley
John Deere
Submitted by: Henry Roeckers
12Sept2018
Doodlebugs and Jitneys
Four Winds Chapter awards Everett Cox
the DAR Community Service Award
The Four Winds Chapter try meets and school track
of Daughters of the American meets. He volunteers at the
Revolution honored Everett Anderson County Hospital at
Cox with the fall Community the Hospitality Desk and the
Service Award on September Information Desk.
10th at the Anderson County
Several quotes from the
Hospital. The Community nominating committee memService Award is given to an bers were, Without knowing
outstanding individual nomi- it, Everett Cox has been setnated by community members ting an example for all of the
for his or her exemplary volun- students of Anderson County.
teer service.
Here it is hoping that they all
Cox has been active in the follow his lead. Everett is
Anderson County area for deserving of recognition for his
the past 3 decades.
he has been a DJ for
school dances, fundraisers, car shows,
Square Fair, elementary school play
day, Jump Rope for
Heart, Family Health
Festival, Anderson
County
Hospital
Health Festival, and
various other activities for many years. He
also helps with high
Carla Ewert presents the award to
school cross coun-
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
to four doses are to be taken
every day according to the
severity of the case. We make
the price as low as we possibly
can in order that they may be
within reach of everyone of our
customers. Only $.18 each bottle, with exception of the three
rare ones.
Are you wondering what diseases these pills or discs were
used for. Actually there are 38
named. Here are a few: cholera, whooping cough, malaria,
dyspepsia, ulcers, dropsy, canker sores, toothaches, diarrhea,
infants teething, ear aches, kidney diseases, diseases of the
heart, etc.
My doesnt this bottle have a
story to tell?
(620) 365-5232
dlayman@dieselandturbo.com
You just proved
advertising works! Call
(785) 448-3121 to advertise
your business today!
1 S. Walnut IOLA
David Layman, Mgr.
PSI, Inc.
See us for all your insurance needs.
MOUND CITY OFFICE
IolaUngeheuer
David
837-7825
(620)(913)
365-6908
Senior & Member
Discounts
Gluten Free Foods
To advertise your
business here,
call Stacey at
(785) 448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Children and tractors: safety webinar, Sept. 19
Children born on farms
have many opportunities and
experiences that other children dont have. But even if
a child is born to farm, he
or she shouldnt be on a tractor until they are old enough
to operate it safely. There are
other, safer ways to cultivate
an interest in farming.
Join presenter Marsha
Salzwedel, M.S., at noon (CT)
on Wednesday, Sept. 19, for
an AgriSafe Network webinar
examining, Children and tractors: myths, facts or other.
We do get calls about
babies on tractors, said
Salzwedel, agricultural youth
safety specialist with the
National Childrens Center for
Rural and Agricultural Health
and Safety, part of Marshfield
Clinic Research Institute,
Marshfield, Wis. Parents and
grandparents may see this as
a way to foster an interest in
farming, but truth is, the farm
worksite is a dangerous place
for infants and toddlers.
The webinar, scheduled in
the middle of National Farm
Safety and Health Week, will
discuss the risks and benefits
associated with children on the
farm, and will also:
Explore some of the common
myths associated with children and tractors
Discuss safety concerns of
babies in tractors
Explore safe ways to nurture an interest in farming in
children
Discuss how youth can work
safely in and around tractors
Determine what can be done
to keep visitors safe around
tractors and equipment
Identify resources that can
be used to help safeguard children and youth around tractors
Tractors and equipment are
a leading cause of injury and
fatality for infants and children, and many of the myths
surrounding them contribute
to the problem.
Instructor seats (buddy
seats) are not designed to
adequately restrain a childs
car seat, nor are the seat belts
6A
LOCAL
designed for small children,
Salzwedel said. And it should
never be assumed that cabs
even with locked doors will
provide protection. There are
known instances of cab doors
opening during operation and
children being run over. There
are also cases of windows and
windshields giving way when
children lean on them.
Children on tractors can
also be a serious distraction for
the operator, as their attention is split between the job
they are doing and the infant/
child, putting their safety and
the safety of the child in jeopardy. Distracted work is dangerous work.
The webinar is free, but
attendees must register at
www.agrisafe.org.
33 kids are injured daily in farm-related
incidents and one child dies every 3 days
Recently,
National
Childrens Center for Rural
and Agricultural Health and
Safety released a report concerning agricultural safety
for children. The data they
compiled was shocking. In
the United States, a child will
die in a farm-related incident
every three days. In addition,
every day, a farm will injure 33
kids in an agriculturally related accident.
Marsha Salzwedel, a safety
specialist with the National
Childrens Center, therefore,
explained which data the
National Childrens Center
used. When we say seriously injured, were not talking
about a child falling down and
scraping their knee or something like that. Its an injury
that if it took place in an adult
would probably require time
off work.
Leading Cause of Child
Fatalities
The leading cause of child
fatalities on a farm is machinery. Over 25% of the time, this
was the case. Motor vehicles,
including ATVS, come in second. Teenagers are one of the
highest groups of children at
risk on a farm. This is because
it is legal to
use any farming
equipment. This
includes tractors, which
are responsible for the
most farming
injuries.
When
a
tractor rolls
over,
the
chance
of
injury and
even death
is very high.
New tractors must have rollover protective structures
(ROPS). ROPS provides a protective space to prevent the
tractor from crushing a worker. However, the seatbelt must
be worn. Without it, a farm
worker can easily fall out of the
seat. Then, the tractor or ROPs
can crush him or her.
Not Your Fault
Remember, you dont have
to use farm equipment negligently for it to malfunction.
Farm equipment malfunctions occur because companies dont design safe machinery. Manufacturers often fail
to warn you of all the ways
you can be injured while
using these heavy, complex
machines.
When farmers are injured
by unsafe farm machinery
without adequate warnings for
secure operation, it is equipment is considered defective.
This term that applies to poor
design, improper manufacturing, negligent marketing, or all
three.
Consequently, if you are an
injured farm worker, if one of
your family members has been
injured or died working on a
farm, or if you have lost wages
due to injury, you may be entitled to compensation.
National Farm Safety
and
Health Week
2×2
state farm
2×2 And. Co.
Farm Bur Assn
2×2
ekae
213 S. Maple
Anderson County
Garnett, Kansas
Farm Bureau Association (785) 448-0099
Remember us for your next set of tires!
2×2
wolken tire
2×2
brummel
8th & Oak Street
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-5720
601 South Oak, Garnett 785-448-3212
2×2
valley r
2×2
omalley
2×2
Xtraformance Feeds, Range Minerals,
robert
miller
Supplements
and Premixes
Proud to support our
2×2
agricultural community.
lizer crop
Lizer Crop
Insurance Service
201 N. Maple St.
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3536
2×2
beachner
An Equal Opportunity Provider
Sweet Pro 250 lb. Lick Tubs utilizing
distillers/fermentation products
We offer a complete
line of supplements
to meet your livestock
feeding needs.
For more information and
pricing contact:
Robert Miller
Sales Representative
(785) 448-4301
Anipro Free Choice Liquids
Stockmaker Cow Liquid
201 Weaning/Receiving Liquid
Rods Auto Repair
2×2 & Custom Exhaust
d
rods
auto 31 Storage
an Highway
Rod & Kim Wittman, Owners
Highway 31 & Lakeview Drive
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6535 or cell (785) 448-4360
2×2
Trustpointe
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
7A
LOCAL
Public
Notice
(First published in The Anderson County Review
Tuesday, September 18, 2018)
PUBLIC NOTICE
ANNUAL MEETING ANDERSON COUNTY
FAIR BOARD
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-2018 / PHOTO SUBMITTED
Crest Education Foundation (CEF) Float lining up
for the 2018 Colony Day Parade. Pictured (left to
right): 1st row- Augustus Cook (astronaut), Athena
Cook (Olympic swimmer), Blaine King (zookeeper), Piper Schmidt (chef), McKayla Powell (veterinarian), Hudson Powell (construction worker),
Haylee Powell (mail carrier), McKenna Powell
(nurse). 2nd row-Kaylee Allen (doctor), Jaycee
Schmidt (artist), Hanna Schmidt (softball player), Easton King (penguin trainer), Aubrey Allen
(baker). The box titled Live Animals was a prop
to go along with the zookeeper costume.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-2018 / PHOTO SUBMITTED
Participating in the Crest Education Foundation (CEF) Photo
Booth at Crest Community Open House are Mrs. Bailey Lee,
Crest Science teacher, Ms. Hannah Boehm, Vo Ag teacher and
FFA sponsor and Mr. Shane Walter, Crest Superintendent and
Elementary Principal.
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given in accordance
with Anderson County Fair Board Constitution
and By-Laws, that on Monday, October 1st at the
Anderson County Annex building beginning a
7:00 p.m., the members of the Anderson County
Fair Board shall meet for the purpose of: electing
from among their members a Board of Directors
consisting of a president, vice-president, secre
tary, treasurer and five additional members.
Jess Rockers, Chairman
Anderson County Fair Board
Sp18t2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-2018 / PHOTO SUBMITTED
Crest Education Foundation provided a fun photo booth at the Crest
Community Open House. Pictured left to right is Miss Kaitlyn
Dispensa, 1st Grade Teacher, Haylee Powell, Aubrey Ellington and
Ella Beebe-1st grade students.
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-2018 / KEVIN GAINES
Some random shots of the mutton busting and bull riding from Saturday nights show.
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
ANDERSON COUNTY
VS.
IOLA
6×12
ACHS Homecoming
Friday, Sept. 21
Coronation 6:30pm
Game Time 7:00pm
HOMECOMING ATTENDANTS:
HOMECOMING CANDIDATES:
(L to R): Fr. Abby Johnston & Reece Katzer
Sp. Mackenzie Kueser & Justin Stifter
Jr. Maya Corley & Nick Lybarger
King Candidates Front Row (L to R):
Carson Powelson, Austin Adams, Dominic Sutton
Queen Candidates Back Row (L to R):
Paige Rupp, Holli Miller, Not pictured: Jenna Schmit
These area businesses proudly support our youth…
Adamson Bros. Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Farm Bureau Financial Svcs
Agent – Amanda Jones
Garnett (785) 448-6125
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Brand N Iron
Princeton
(785) 937-2225
Farmers State Bank
Garnett
(785) 448-5451
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett
(785) 448-5720
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett
(785) 448-6122
CARSTAR
Ottawa
(785) 242-8916
Bank of Greeley
Greeley
(785) 867-2010
Country Mart
Garnett
(785) 448-2121
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Barnes Seed Service, LLC
Garnett
(785) 304-2500
Beckman Motors
Garnett
(785) 448-5441
Dairy Queen
Garnett
(785) 448-5800
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett
(785) 448-2888
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Princeton Quick Stop
Princeton
(785) 937-2061
GSSB
Garnett
(785) 448-3111
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond
800-374-6988
Garnett Home Center & Rental
Ryans Pest Control
Garnett
(785) 448-4323
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Modern Woodmen Fraternal
Financial – Margie Highberger
(785) 448-7914
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
OMalley Equipment
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Tom Adams Construction
Garnett
(785) 448-3997
TrustPoint Ins. & Real Estate
Garnett Burlington Emporia
800-258-4219
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
8A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
SPORTS
Central Heights Vikings snap 18
game losing streak in football
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-18 / DANE HICKS
Anderson County head coach Greg Welch instructs his players during a timeout during Monday nights
39-14 loss to Parsons.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND – Central Heights
Vikings rallied from a 14-12
halftime
deficit
against
Waubaunsee to earn their
first win, 34-22, after losing 18
straight games. Their last win
was September 12, 2016, a span
of 2 years and 2 days.
After trailing by 2 at halftime, the Vikings added a
touchdown and 2-point conversion in the third to take a 20-14
advantage.
The Vikings tacked on a
touchdown with 7 minutes
remaining to take a 26-14 lead.
Wabaunsee was driving with
3 minutes to go when Mason
Roberts intercepted a pass to
seemingly seal the win, but a
fumble return touchdown by
Wabaunsee made things interesting over the past couple of
minutes as they cut the lead to
26-22.
The Vikings would recover
the ensuing onside kick and
Roberts would again make a
key play, rushing 55 yards in
the final minute of the game to
seal the victory.
Roberts would finish the day
with 136 yards on 19 carries and
2 touchdowns to lead the way
for the Vikings. Roberts also
led all receivers with 6 catches
(40 yards).
Quarterback Dakota Beers
would connect on 11 of 24 passes, 141 yards, for 3 touchdowns
and 1 interception.
Matt Cubit hauled in 4 passes for 79 yards and 2 scores on
the evening.
Roberts and Brady Burson
led the team with 7 tackles
each, 4 of them being solo stops.
Next up for the Vikings (1-2)
is a trip to Oskaloosa (0-3) on
Friday night. Oskaloosa has
been outscored 138-6 over the
first three games of the season.
Parsons downs AC Bulldogs Viking boys cross country
win Wellsville Invitational
39-14 in makeup game
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Due to area flooding, the Anderson County
Bulldogs and Parsons Vikings
met on Monday night with
Parsons controlling the game
from the start and winning
39-14.
It was a defensive battle in
the first half before the Vikings
took control in the third quarter.
The Bulldogs started off the
game allowing two unconventional touchdowns, one off a
punt return and the other a
fumble return to fall behind
early 13-0.
The first offensive score
came with just under 4 minutes left in the half as Parsons
hooked up for a 51 yard scoring
strike to take a 19-0 lead into
intermission.
The big plays would continue in the second half for the
Vikings as the Bulldogs just
didnt have an answer.
On the night, the Vikings
would score four offensive
touchdowns on passes totalling
167 yards.
Outside the 4 touchdowns, the
Bulldogs limited the Vikings to
176 yards on 49 plays, just 3.6
yards per play.
The Vikings connected on a
66 yard pass with under 2 minutes left in the third and another 30 yard pass for a touchdown
with 24 seconds left in the third
to open up a commanding 33-0
advantage.
Anderson County would
finally get on the scoreboard
as Gavin Wolken would connect up with Bo Dilliner for a
21 yard touchdown with 7:20
remaining to cut the deficit to
33-7.
After the Vikings answered,
the Bulldogs Logan Allen
tacked on the final touchdown
of the night with a 15 yard
scamper to account for the final
score of 39-14.
The Bulldogs lost their first
road contest of the season with
a 41-7 loss to Santa Fe Trail on
Friday night. Anderson County
scored first before Santa Fe
Trail reeled off the final 41
points of the game for the victory.
Next up for Anderson County
(0-3) is their Homecoming
game this week against Iola
(0-3). Parsons beat Iola 49-14 to
open the season.
Bulldogs boys and girls
both runner-up at Parsons
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
PARSONS – Last Thursday,
both the boys and girls cross
country teams finished 2nd at
the Parsons Invitational at Big
Hill Lake.
The underclassmen led the
way for the Lady Bulldogs.
Sophomore Rayna Jasper (6th,
23:26) was the top female finisher for ACHS.
The trio of Emily Moyer,
Katie Schmit and Lanie Walter
all finished in the top 25.
Moyer (14th, 24:52) is a freshman. Schmit (17th, 25:28) and
Correction:
Due to a reporters error, last
weeks article on the Central
Heights Vikings cross country
runners results were incorrectly listed in their opening meet
at Lyndon.
Tyler Stevenson (19:46) finished 2nd (not 6th) and Mason
McCurry (20:42) finished 6th
and Caleb Meyer (20:55) finished 7th.
Our apologies for the error.
1×3
AD
Walter (22nd, 26:23) are both
sophomores.
Junior Lily Spring (25:53)
finished just outside the top 10,
in 11th place.
Maya Corley (26th, 26:43)
and Paige Rupp (48th, 34:49)
round out the Bulldog varsity
runners.
Iola (44 points) edged out
the Bulldogs (54 points) and
Independence (57 points) to win
the team title.
Contrary to the girls team,
the boys were led by upperclassmen.
Morgan Hall-Kropf (19:05),
junior, led all Bulldog runners
with a 3rd place finish.
Seniors Ryland Porter (19:27)
and Damone Kueser (21:13) finished in 7th and 21st respectively.
Sophomores Riley Hedges
(6th, 20:26), Jeremiah Riehl
(29th, 21:45), Leo Sheahan (33rd,
22:09) and Orvel Broce (42nd,
22:42) round out the Bulldog
runners on the afternoon.
Iola won the team title with
just 27 points. ACHS was second with 70 points, followed by
Erie with 118 points on the day.
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Top Dog
of the
Week!
Mason
Roberts
Mason rushed for 136 yards,
had 40 yards receiving, scored
twice and had an interception in
a 34-22 win over Wabaunsee.
Top Dog of the Week wins a $10 Sonic gift card and our
special recognition vehicle window decal. Watch for
them on the road, and each week in
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELLSVILLE – It was another
hot, humid September afternoon last Thursday at the
Wellsville Invitational but it
wasnt just the weather heating
up as the Central Heights runners are off to a hot start this
season as well.
It was the most successful
day at the Wellsville meet in
many years, head coach Troy
Prosser stated matter of factly.
Juniors Tyler Stevenson (3rd
place, 17:54) and Alex Cannady
(4th, 18:11) paced the Vikings
enroute to a team total of just
43 points and winning the invitational, defeating much larger schools such as Spring Hill,
Burlington and Chanute.
All six varsity runners finished in the top 20 out of 77
runners on the afternoon.
Caleb Meyer (7th place,
18:45), Mason McCurry (13th,
19:19), Bryce Sommer (16th,
19:27) and Luke Cotter( 20th,
19:36) were the 4 other runners
that contributed to the victory.
In junior varsity action,
David Craft won the gold medal
with a time of 19:55 while running a very intelligent race in
the mind of Coach Prosser.
On the girls side freshmen
Lily Meyer (3rd, 21:31) and
Taryn Compton (23rd, 23:30), as
well as junior Madison Bridges
(17th, 22:51).
Prosser stated, It was a very
competitive field that included
a handful of 3A State medalists
from last season.
In a combined 7th grade race
comprised of 84 girls and 121
boys, 7th grader Emma Cubit
ran her personal best of 13:49
to finish 2nd, while 6th graders
Melaney Chrisjohn and Kaylee
Holstine were both in the top 10
with 7th and 9th place finishes
respectively.
The top boys in this race for
the Vikings were 6th graders
Connor Burkdoll and Owen
Miller finishing 7th and 11th.
We are making progress
and setting personal bests all
over the teams, but we will
have another tough challenge
ahead of us next week at Prairie
View, said Prosser.
Crest Lady Lancers fight hard
but drop 2 out of 3 at NE-Arma
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
ARMA – The Crest Lady
Lancers came up short in 2 out
of the 3 games last Tuesday at
Northeast Arma High School,
downing Altoona in the final
game of the day to salvage at
least a win on the afternoon.
First up was host NE-Arma.
Both games were hotly contested but Crest fell short in both of
them 23-25.
Regan Godderz led the way
connecting on all 9 serves (1
ace), had 14 assists, 7 digs and
recorded the highest received
average (3.0).
Jewel Armstrong also connected on all of her serves (8) to
go along with 1 ace and 3 digs
in the match.
Cassie Bowen record 7 digs
and 6 kills and Aubree Holloran
added 5 digs and 5 kills.
Camryn Strickler was perfect on her serves (8), 1 ace, 1
block and 3 digs.
Lindsey Godderz had 3 digs
and 1 kill to go along with a 3.0
serve receive average.
In game 2 against Chetopa,
the Lady Lancers started out
hot winning the first set 25-15
before dropping the final two
sets, 14-25 and 19-25.
R. Godderz connected on 14
of 15 serves to go along with 15
assists and 7 digs.
Bowen did well defensively
with 6 digs and 4 blocks in the
set to go along with 9 kills at
the net.
Strickler led the way serving in the match recording 4
aces on a perfect 13 serves. She
was also solid defensively with
14 digs and 2 blocks and was
second on the team with 8 kills.
The last game of the evening
saw Crest get the upper hand
against Altoona (26-24, 25-16).
R. Godderz recorded 13
assists and 1 kill in the match
and had the highest serve
receive average (3.0).
Bowen was second on the
team with 7 kills and 2 digs.
Strickler had a team high 4
aces on just 9 serves and added
8 kills.
Monday: $1 tacos, beans, rice, Natural Light
Tuesday: bbq & burgers, house-smoked meat
We have
sandwiches, brisket, ham, turkey, or try our
new 1/2 pound cheeseburger Wednesday:
Fried chicken Thursday: Meatloaf
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
fried chicken Saturday: Different special every week every 1st Sat.
ribeye steak, 3rd Sat. boiled shrimp Sunday: Homemade pan-fried
chicken with sides- mashed potatoes, chicken
gravy, corn, potato salad, macaroni salad, slaw.
2×2
Parker1Stop
pizza!
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
GunGuys uns
Ladies Day
Every Tuesday!
es of G
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
3×5
TrustPoint Insurance
785-418-0711
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
thegunguys@yahoo.com
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, September 18
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo at
VFW Hall
Wednesday, September 19
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
Noon – Birthday dinner at Garnett
Senior Center, with entertainment.
RSVP to (785) 448-6996 the day
before.
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, September 20
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
6 p.m. – Pitch @ Senior Center bring snacks
Monday, September 24
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
1-2 p.m. – Anderson County
Caregiver Support Group, Park
Place Plaza North Club House
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade) Den
Cub Scouts and Wolves (second
grade) Den Cub Scouts meeting
Tuesday, September 25
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior
Center – Dominoes, cards and
pool table
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo at
VFW Hall
Wednesday, September 26
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate Bridge at
the Garnett Inn
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist Club at
Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Public Library Book
Discussion
Thursday, September 27
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
6 p.m. – Pitch @ Senior Center bring snacks
Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
Monday, October 1
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
6-8:30 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
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lodge
No. 338
Tuesday, October 2
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo at
VFW Hall
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
Wednesday, October 3
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – USD 365 Booster
Club
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, October 4
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
1:30 p.m. – Colony United
Methodist Women at Colony
United Methodist Church
1×2
AD
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
1×2
AD
plazacinemaottawa.com
community
A Week in the Life of Anderson
County winners announced
A Week in the Life of
Anderson County photo contest
was sponsored by the Garnett
Public Library and the Friends of
the Garnett Library.
Ten people entered 32 pictures chronicling life
in Anderson County
during the week July
29th-August 4th.
The photos are on
display in the front
hallway of the Garnett
Public Library through
the month of September.
Winners
were
announced at a reception on Sunday, Sept.
8th. They are as follows:
Portrait Division
Adult – Joanna Bauman
Portrait Division
Youth Moriah Esh
Photographers
Choiceadult – Rosanna Bauman
Photographers
Choice
youth – Noelle Miller
Only in Anderson County
and Peoples Choice Award
Nick Swallow
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Honorable Mentionadult
Rosanna Bauman and Katrina
Kichler
Honorable MentionYouth Moriah Esh
Above – Portrait DivisionYouth Moriah Esh. Above right – Photographers Choiceadult
Adult – Joanna Bauman. Bottom right – Photographers Choiceyouth – Noelle Miller
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-18 / Photo Submitted
– Rosanna Bauman. Bottom left – Portrait Division
Sell stuff to your
Uncle Sam
When I was a kid at the
U.S. Marine Corps Officer
Candidate School in Quantico,
Va., back in the early 1980s,
we got a buzz haircut every
week, whether we needed it or
not.
Of course, we didnt need
it. Nobodys hair grows that
fast after the first buzz, not
even when youre 19. The
reason we got our hair cut
every week was wait for
it because thats what the
Navy Department guaranteed
to the barbers who won the
bid to cut our hair. They were
private contractors, of course,
and they were guaranteed x
number of heads of hair to cut
per week at $2.50 per head,
even if there was barely any
hair on the heads they were
cutting.
The moral to the story is
this: No matter what it is your
business does, you should register yourself as a contractor
with the federal government
you may end up getting paid
for a job that doesnt even need
to be done!
First, you have to register
with the System of Awards
Management (SAM) its the
vendor database for all federal departments which they
use to source up providers for
various products and services.
When completing the profile
section youll have to answer
questions about your company, its size, socio-economic
status, location, etc.
That information is all
keyed to certain codes which
different agencies use when
retrieving your information.
For instance, theres your
NAICS code which identifies
your industry along with the
SIC (standard industry code),
and a DUNS for your location.
HOW TO SELL STUFF
3×10.5
Renaissance Festival
Dane Hicks
Publisher
THEPublisher
TRADING POST
Review
Youll also need your businesses federal tax ID number.
The questions are pretty
extensive, but the more information you complete the better chance federal agencies
have of finding you when they
submit queries into the system on their end.
Once youre registered
you can start reviewing bid
announcements and submitting bids on federal contracts.
There are online bid notification services (check with
your industry association
for one they recommend) or
look through options like fedbizopps.gov or bidsync.com.
Some will have certain limits like contract minimums,
location restrictions, etc., so
look for one that works for
your specific company. Also,
review the SBAs government
contracting information and
watch for local colleges and
universities that may offer
seminars on government contracting.
Remember,
the
U.S.
Government is the biggest
customer in the world. Dont
miss your chance to sell stuff
to your Uncle Sam!
Dane Hicks, President
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
The Anderson County Review
The Trading Post
Charles and Peggy Carlson
win duplicate bridge
Gladys Turner and Dave
Leitch won the duplicate
bridge match September 12th
in Garnett.
Anita Dennis and Steve
Brodmerkle came in second. Faye Leitch and Lynda
Feuerborn tied with Peggy
and Charles Carlson for third
and fourth.
The Garnett Duplicate
Club plays each Wednesday at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
LOCAL
Crest Education Foundation going strong, thankful for community support
Calendar
19-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement,
7 p.m.; 20-County bus to Iola,
phone 243 hrs. before you need
a ride 785-448-4410 any weekday; 26-Fire Dept. fire meeting,
Fire Station, 7 p.m
School Calendar
19-Early Release Day-3:05
p.m., Elementary K-5; 3:10 p.m.,
Grades 6-12; 20-Middle School
volleyball at Crest vs. AltoonaMidway, 5 p.m.; Middle School
football at Crest vs. AltoonaMidway, 6 p.m.; 21-high school
football at Crest vs. St. Paul
7 p.m. Homecoming; 25-high
school volleyball at St. Paul,
4:30 p.m.
Meal Site
19-Birthday
Meal-fried
chicken breast, mashed potatoes, gravy, green beans, roll,
cake, ice cream; 21-chili, coleslaw, crackers, cinnamon roll;
24-turkey sandwich, potato
salad, salad mix, hamburger
bun, pineapple. Phone 620-8523457 for meal reservations.
Christian Church
Sept. 9 church service
Howard Reiter gave the
Communion Meditation on
focusing more on what God sees
as important. The more we are
attracted to Christ, the less we
will be distracted by the world.
Pastor Chase Riebel began
our first week of the Believe
series which focuses on understanding God and the Trinity.
He discussed the power of God,
which encompasses Gods
works (He created everything
and holds everything together),
nature (He does not change and
knows all) and character (He is
holy, merciful and just).
Mens Bible study Tuesday
morning, 7 a.m. Wednesday 5:30
p.m. will be a meal and prayer
time at the parsonage, youth
Believe study 7 p.m. (kids are
welcome to come hang out at
4:30). Believe small groups
start this week with four
groups to choose from. If you
have not yet gotten your books,
theyre available for purchase
at the church. Groups will
be held on Sunday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday
nights. Thursday will be the
middle school hang out at the
Community Church prior to
the ballgames from 3:30-5 p.m.
COLONY NEWS
Mary A. Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
Cowboy
Praise and worship in music
and songs to the Lord was led
by Cindy Beckmon, Terri Louk,
Randy Maple, Billy Beckmon,
Lance Ramsey and Patty Spain
Sept. 9 at High Point Cowboy
Church.
Emphasizing
Gods
Promises Are For Us, apostle
Jon Petty urged all to study
Gods word to find your promise, meditate on it to get it in
your heart, because what is
in the heart comes out of the
mouth. It is written in 2 Peter
1:2-4 He has given great and
precious promises.
A time of fellowship followed
the morning message and the
study group gathered to review
the book God is Good.
Northcott
Sept. 23-Kristan Hammond,
guest speaker; 27-Women of
Faith, 6:30 p.m., dinner menu
is hamburgers; Sept. 18, Pastor
Sams birthday; Sept. 15-Orville
and Lora Crouch anniversary.
www.facebook.com/
NorthcottChurch.
UMC
Scripture presented at the
United Methodist Church Sept.
9 was Proverbs 22: 1-2, 7-9, 22-23,
James 2: 1-14 and Mark 7: 24-37.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, These Are My
Monkeys, This Is My Circus.
Colony Day
The 2018 Dont Stop Believin
Parade : Colony Day Grand
Marshals were Gene and
Bonnie Vincent and Jerry and
Mary Bowen. Crest USD 479s
entry was the band with 45
members 6-12 graders enrolled;
Anderson County EMS; Colony
Fire Dept.; Anderson County
Council on Aging; Crest
Education Foundation (CEF);
Steve Watkins for US Congress;
Mark Samsel for Kansas House
of Representatives; Colony
Christian Church (following
parade they served root beer
floats with freewill donations
towards the Youth Group);
Colony Christian Church
Jesus Rescues!; Crest FFA
Members; Ellington Family;
Crest High School Family,
Career
and
Community
Leaders of America; Lions
Club; Crest High School
Football; Neil and Nancy
Rogers, Blue Springs, MO;
John Hermreck, Garnett; D of
K Vaults, Iola; Kyle and Nicole
Wainwright (Butch Trabuc,
driver); float built by Kyle
& Nicole (Trabuc) followed;
AX Feeds (Jeff McAdam and
Colby McAdam; Jolly Dozen
Club; Moran Manor; 1968 Crest
Class 50th Reunion; Hawkins
(Dereck-Cooper Caudell; Nicole
Bain, 4 yr. old decorated biker;
Crest 6th Grade Class.
Final Results: Large FloatFirst-Jolly Dozen; Second-Crest
6th Grade; Third-FCCLA. Mini
Floats: First-Crest Education
Foundation; Second-Colony
Christian Church; ThirdEllington Family. Judges
Choice: First-Moran Manor;
Second, Crest Class of 68;
Third, Nicole Trabuc.
Crest Education Foundation
The
Crest
Education
Foundation met Sept. 6 at the
City Hall Colony Community
Room.
Officers Candace
Powell, Chrissy Powell, Laura
Schmidt and Denise King
were present. Casey Cook
was absent. Joining them was
guest Christy McGhee.
New items of discussion
were the Kincaid Fair and
Trivia Night. CEF is planning a float for the Sept. 29
Kincaid Fair Parade. This will
follow along with the theme of
Pioneer Ways to Modern Days.
The following weekend, on
Saturday, Oct. 6, CEF will host
a Trivia Night fundraiser at the
Kincaid School Gymnasium.
Doors will open at 6 p.m. with
trivia starting at 6:30. They are
currently seeking teams of six
people, $20 per person or $120
per team. All players 21 and
over please. Spots are limited,
so call Chrissy at 620-363-0080
to reserve your table soon! All
teams should be registered by
Monday, Oct. 1.
Old items of discussion
were following up on CEF
involvement at Open House
and Colony Day, as well as the
CEF Read 2 Lead Campaign.
CEF was very happy with the
turnout at Open House and
they have received all positive
feedback. The CEF Lancer
Tailgate Basket was won by
Trilla Miller. Thank you cards
were received from Mrs. Wicoff
and her students. CEF printed
and sent home pictures to all
students and staff that participated in the photo booth. They
look forward to participating
in this event again next year.
Colony Day was a fun day for
the Education Foundation.
Their Lancer Lemonade Stand,
worked by Crest students, was
a big hit, with the stand selling all of the lemonade during
parade time. They also raffled
off a Lemonade Basket, being
won by Kendall McGhee. The
CEF float, titled Dont Stop
Believin In Our Future, won
first place in the mini float
division. They discussed the
continuation of the Read 2
Lead Campaign, with hopes
of donating more books to the
Crest Library. CEF received
a donation of 42 new hardback
books from School wide, Inc.
that were presented to the
school and on display during
Open House. Librarian Brenna
Hammond sent a thank you
card and is working to get those
CREST
books into circulation soon.
CEF hopes to receive a book list
from Mrs. Hammond and will
work towards purchasing more
books for the school library.
The
Crest
Education
Foundation wants to thank
the community once again for
the wonderful outpouring of
support shown to our foundation. The next meeting will
be Thursday, Oct. 4, at 6 p.m.
in the City Hall Community
Room. Any and all Crest
patrons are welcomed to attend
and join the foundation.
City Council
At the July 25 City Council
meeting reports consisted from
Supt. Tim Dietrich saying cold
patch on Beech St. to be applied
the following day and needed to
rent a tamper to get it packed
down better; picnic tables are
in and pictures need to be taken
to finish the grant.
Steven Leonard presented a
petition to the council asking
for Children at Play signs and
to reduce the speed limit in
residential areas to 20 mph to
protect the children. Council
informed him they did not have
the funds to put up Children
at Play signs all over town
or to hire a full time police
department to enforce reduced
speeds. There are also speed
limit signs around town now
that people are ignoring.
Ordinances 440 and 441
authorizing the use of the 2018
Standard Traffic Ordinance
and 2018 Uniform Public
Offense Code for Kansas Cities
were approved.
Around Town
Dustin and Rochelle Smart
have a baby girl born September
8 at the Chanute Hospital. She
was named Lily Elizabeth and
joins a sister, Jayden. Darren
and Cindy McGhee, Westphalia
are grandparents, Thelma
Culler of Colony is a great
grandmother.
Colony weather left hot and
dry weather to a cool 40 and
a flood by Saturday morning
Sept. 8. Kansas weather, right?
Charlene Tinsley, 88, passed
away at her home August 31.
She and her late husband lived
here all their married life.
She was born here but moved
with her parents to Boulder,
Colorado where she graduated
from high school and attended
Boulder University for awhile.
Funeral services were held
Sept. 5 at the Colony High Point
Cowboy Church. Burial followed in the Colony Cemetery.
Charlene will be missed.
HOMECOMING CANDIDATES:
vs.
King Candidates Front Row L to R:
Kanon Coberly,
Ryan Culler,
Gregory Hardwick
ST. PAUL
Friday,
Sept. 21
6×12
Crest
Coronation
at Homecoming
6:30 p.m.
Games begin 7:00pm.
Queen Candidates Back Row L to R:
Regan Godderz,
Jewel Armstrong,
Breyanna Benjamin
These area businesses proudly support our youth…
Adamson Bros. Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Farm Bureau Financial Svcs
Agent – Amanda Jones
Garnett (785) 448-6125
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Brand N Iron
Princeton
(785) 937-2225
Farmers State Bank
Garnett
(785) 448-5451
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett
(785) 448-5720
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett
(785) 448-6122
CARSTAR
Ottawa
(785) 242-8916
Bank of Greeley
Greeley
(785) 867-2010
Country Mart
Garnett
(785) 448-2121
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Barnes Seed Service, LLC
Garnett
(785) 304-2500
Beckman Motors
Garnett
(785) 448-5441
Dairy Queen
Garnett
(785) 448-5800
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett
(785) 448-2888
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Princeton Quick Stop
Princeton
(785) 937-2061
GSSB
Garnett
(785) 448-3111
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond
800-374-6988
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
Garnett Home Center & Rental
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Modern Woodmen Fraternal
Financial – Margie Highberger
(785) 448-7914
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
OMalley Equipment
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Ryans Pest Control
Garnett
(785) 448-4323
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Tom Adams Construction
Garnett
(785) 448-3997
TrustPoint Ins. & Real Estate
Garnett Burlington Emporia
800-258-4219
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
– Cornstock 2018-
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Saturday,
September
22nd
3B
LOCAL
On the Hill
at Lake
Garnett
Park
Cornstock Schedule
Saturday, September 22nd
Saturday, September 23rd
Long Cedar Disc Golf Tournament
Registration/Playtime: Shotgun Start, 9 a.m.
(Register at Toadstool near east side of dam)
Cost, $30, Ace Pot: $5.
Divisions:
Advanced
Mens Recreation
Womens Recreation
Junior
AKA – The G, join the Second Annual charity
fundraising tournament here for both amateur
and professional disc golfers. Be a part of history
on this amazing course that includes throwing
over water! Cash pool payout in each division.
Proceeds will benefit the expansion and development of this disc golf course to include holes for
use at Garnett Elementary School located just
west of the North Lake Park.
*Concert Schedule
Gates Open
3:30 p.m.
VIP Entertainment
The Lost Troubadours 3:30 p.m.
Main Stage
Restless Heart
Josh Abbott Band
Trace Adkins
*All times are approximate and subject to change
We welcome everyone to
Garnett for the 2018 Cornstock.
2×3
kansas
ers
5:30 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
2×3
miller hardware
grow-
Proud Sponsor of Cornstock 2018!
2×3
rickerson pipe
lining
Use ethanol blended fuels.
Clean fuel from Kansas farms.
Garnett 785-448-6922
www.kscorn.com
Come & enjoy the
2×3
Anderson
County Cornstock!
2×3
sandras
www.rickersonpipelining.com
beachner grain
Join the fun at
2×3
Cornstock 2018!
wolken tire
Cornstock After Party!
2×3
brummel
2×3
tradewinds
Free
Range
Chicken
Featuring
the Farewell
performance of
8th & Oak Street Garnett, KS (785) 448-5720
Help u
keep ths
party e
rolling
!
Join us in downtown Garnett
Sat., Sept. 22, after Cornstock…
The party rolls on 10 p.m. – 1 a.m.
Must be 21. Cash Only.
Designated drivers
& rides available.
Come have fun
2×3
at Cornstock!
maple st liquor
Stop by and see us.
Enjoy the Fun at Cornstock!
Check out the new inventory at Beckman Motors.
Now featuring 2018 Buicks, Chevys and Fords!
3×6
Beckman
3×5
ekae
2018 Chevy Silverado
2018 Ford Super Duty
2018 Chevy Colorado
2018 Buick Encore
Outstanding Performance in
GM Sales for all of Kansas
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441 800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
We welcome you to
join us for the fun
and celebration
at Cornstock
this Saturday!
4B
– Cornstock 2018 –
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
LOCAL
Saturday,
September
22nd
On the Hill
at Lake
Garnett
Park
Trace Adkins, Josh Abbott Band & Restless
Heart take the stage Sept. 22rd at Cornstock
GARNETT Trace Adkins
trademark
baritone has
p o w e r e d
countless hits
to the top of
the
charts.
The three-time
GRAMMYnominated
member
of
the Grand Ole
Opry is a TV
personality,
actor, author,
and spokesman for the
Wounded
W a r r i o r
Project and
the American
Red
Cross,
for whom he
raised more
than $1.5 million dollars
as winner of
NBCs
AllStar Celebrity Trace Adkins
Apprentice.
In recent years, Adkins
has performed for our service men and women across
11 USO Tours. In his 2007
autobiography, A Personal
Stand: Observations and
Opinions from a Freethinking
Roughneck, he recounted his
rise to fame, brushes with
death and battles with personal demons. Adkins has played
a tough-as-nails biker in The
Lincoln Lawyer (starring
Matthew McConaughey), a
desperate father in Deepwater
Horizon
(starring
Mark
Wahlberg) and a wise oracle
of a tattoo artist in the family-friendly film Moms Night
Out (starring Patricia Heaton,
Sean Astin, Sarah Drew).
Adkins starred in his latest
Restless Heart
Josh Abbott band.
movie, I Can Only Imagine,
which came out in March.
Trace Adkins song list
includes:
Honky
Tonk
Badonkadonk – Youre Gonna
Miss This – Ladies Love
Country Boys – Just Fishin
– Still A Soldier – Arlington Songs About Me – Every Light
In The House – Chrome – I Got
My Game On – Muddy Water Hot Mama – Hillbilly Bone and
more.
For more information,
visit www.traceadkins.com
or on Twitter, Facebook and
Instagram@TraceAdkins.
Josh Abbott Band
Josh Abbott Band is a
Texas country (red dirt) band
from Lubbock, composed of
Josh Abbott (vocals, guitar),
Austin Davis (banjo), Preston
Wait (fiddle, guitar), Edward
Villanueva (drums), James
Hertless (bass guitar), Caleb
Keeter (guitar), and David
Fralin (keys/mandolin).
In August 2017 the band
released its 5th album. Here
is what Josh Abbott has to say
about it:
Until My Voice Gives Out
is a song about embracing life
lessons learned and using them
to make a better future. Josh
Abbott intends to do that in a
way that supports his daughter, who arrived as JAB completed the album. And the band
is making a statement through
that song and through the
entire risk-taking album
about its continued growth and
evolution as it moves forward,
a decade after that first single
gave Texas a taste of JABs
brand of country. Through its
time on the road and its growth
from college-aged hellraisers
into successful, self-employed
musicians, Josh Abbott Band
has been tested thoroughly and
discovered that lifes joy comes
not from playing it safe, but
from taking chances and from
tackling hurdles head-on.
I feel like were way better
than we were 10 years ago, and
thats natural, Abbott says.
Theres a good vibe among all
of us, and a lot of familiarity,
so theres a lot of trust, which
is a very simple word but very
complex sometimes. Theres
no ego. Theres just a group of
guys working together, letting
each other kind of do their own
thing and loving life again.
Restless Heart
John
Dittrich,
Greg
Jennings, Paul Gregg, Dave
T H E O N LY R E A L C H O I C E
L2501DT + LOADER
FATHER
energetic
WDQGUH
the fun. M
2×5
AD
State Farm
Ryan Disbrow CLU, Agent
504 W. Redbud
Garnett, KS 66032
Bus: 785-448-1660
ryan.disbrow.my1p@statefarm.com
M-W-F 8:30-5:30
T-Th 8:30-7:00
Weekend by Appointment
4×10 mcConnel
Machinery
Wheels, The Bluest Eyes in
Texas, and A Tender Lie.
Besides these songs, the band
has nine other Top Ten singles on that chart. Two of the
bands singles Ill Still Be
Loving You and When She
Cries both reached Top 40
on the Billboard Hot 100.
Restless Heart will take the
stage at 5:30 p.m. Josh Abbott
Band will follow at 7:00 p.m.,
followed by Trace Adkins at
9:00 p.m.
Innis, and Larry Stewart the
men who make up Restless
Heart have enjoyed one of the
most successful careers in
Country Music history, placing
over 25 singles on the charts
with six consecutive #1 hits,
four of their albums have been
certified Gold by the RIAA, and
they have won a wide range of
awards from many organizations including the Academy
of Country Musics Top Vocal
Group trophy.
Restless Heart Number
One singles include: That
Rock Wont Roll, Ill Still Be
Loving You, Why Does It
Have to Be (Wrong or Right),
DEPENDABLE and
KNOWLEDGEABLE
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SINGLE ARTSY GUY. If you love
painting, decorating, baking and knitting,
Look no further.
Having one special person for your
car, home and life insurance lets
you get down to business with the
rest of your life. Its what I do.
GET TO A BETTER STATE .
CALL ME TODAY.
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company,
State Farm Indemnity Company, State Farm Fire and Casualty Company,
1101201.1
State Farm General Insurance Company, Bloomington, IL
We look forward to
2×3
seeing you at Cornstock 2018!
farmers
bank
PAYMENTS AS LOW AS
$171
PER MONTH*
0% FINANCING
FOR
84 MONTHS*
APR
state
6 YEAR
LIMITED
POWERTRAIN
WARRANTY**
www.fsbkansas.com
PROMOTIONAL OFFERS END 12/31/18.
www.mcconnellmachineryco.com
1111 E. 23rd St.
Lawrence, KS 66046
785-843-2676
*0% A.P.R., 20% down, financing for 84 months on purchases of new Kubota L2501DT plus an LA525 loader with 66" square-back quick attach
bucket from participating dealers in-stock inventory is available to qualified purchasers through Kubota Credit Corporation USA; subject to credit
approval. Example: 84 monthly payments of $11.90 per $1,000 financed. Example amount based on sales price of $17,955.00. Each dealer sets
own price. Prices and payments may vary. Offer expires 12/31/18. Optional equipment may be shown. **Only terms and conditions of Kubotas
standard Limited Warranty apply. For warranty terms see your Kubota dealer or go to KubotaUSA.com.
Proud Corporate
Shuttle
2×3
Partner ofmfa
Cornstock
2018!
oil
KubotaUSA.com
Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2018
704 N. Maple Garnett www.mfaoil.com
– Cornstock 2018 –
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Saturday,
September
22nd
5B
On the Hill
at Lake
Garnett
Park
HISTORY
Important things to know for Cornstock
Info Booth
An Info Booth is on the
festival grounds (with our
official festival merchandise)
courtesy of the Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce. For
assistance, directions, etc.,
please visit the Info Booth.
Special Welcome programs
will be given at the entrance
to the festival. Maps, schedule
of events and feature articles
are included in the welcome
programs.
Free Shuttle Bus Service
FREE shuttle bus service is
available for visitors throughout the day and evening. These
shuttle services will take you
to all events, activities, food
and vendor booths, Concert on
the Hill and parking areas. So
if you dont want to walk, ride
the bus!
Parking
Parking
is
available
throughout the park in designated areas. Be sure to locate
the parking lot signs to remember where you parked. Buses
will stop at Bus Stop signs
designated throughout the
park.
Camping
Camping in designated
areas within the North Lake
Park. Reservations required
through the City of Garnett,
785.448.5496. Electric hook-up
and primitive camping spots
are available on a first come
basis. These sell out fast so
make your reservations immediately. All campers must
purchase concert wristbands.
Otherwise, any congregating
in parking and camping areas
during the concert is strictly
prohibited. All persons camping must comply with all city
regulations. Questions can be a
nsweredbycamphosts
o r v i s i t www.simplygarnett.
com.
Handicapped
Handicap parking is located west of Legion Field in the
fairgrounds (look for signs). A
bus equipped for handi- capped
persons will be stopping at this
designated stop and parking
areas throughout the park.
Handicapped port-a-potties
are available at the Cornstock
Concert on the Hill.
Personal Safety
If you lose someone: In
the event you, your child, or
friends/family become separated at the festival, please talk
beforehand and pick a designated place to meet like the
Information Booth!
carts are prohibited by the public throughout the park and
concert area.
Swimming
is
prohibited in Lake Garnett at any
time. Boating is prohibited
September 22, 2018 for this
event.
First Aid
First aid will be available
for people that might need
assistance.
Police & Security
Police and Security will be
accessible throughout the park
and concert areas.
Personal ATVs and golf
Proud
2×3 Sponsor of Cornstock.
Come
and have a great
Tom
Adams
time at the concert!
32 HP, MFWD, R4 Tires,
QA Loader w/61 Bucket
$20,550
OR $220/Mo.
John Deere 2032R
$20,150
OR $215/Mo.
*
2×4
TrustPoint
Competition
$99/Mo.
*
In Our Dirt Pile!
$40/Mo.
*
John Deere 1025R
25 HP, MFWD, R4 Tires,
QA Loader w/49 Bucket
$13,995
OR
$150/Mo.
*
John Deere 3025E
44 HP, MFWD, R4 Tires,
Loader w/60 QA Bucket
$16,450
OR $190/Mo.
$25,350
$285/Mo.
*
Free Gift
With The Purchase
Of Any 1E – 5E Series
Tractor!*
25 HP, MFWD, R4 Tires,
Loader w/60 QA Bucket
John Deere 4044M
OR
OR
ADD LOADER
FOR
32 HP, MFWD, R4 Tires,
QA Loader w/53 Bucket
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
23 HP, MFWD,
R4 Tires,
QA Loader
w/49 Bucket
*
Residential Commercial Municipal
2×3
6th ave boutiqu
Go Head To Head
With The
John Deere 3033R John Deere 1023E
3×7
$9,400
(785) 448-3997
Hope to see you
at Cornstock!
Before You Buy…
OMally
Invoice
Pricing OnEquipment
All Compact Utility Tractors!
Tom Adams Construction
Corporate Concert Sponsor
2×3
Cornstock 2018
gssb
Cornstock Concert on the
Hill is a rain or shine event.
Admission
Entry requires a ticket or
wristband. No exceptions. All
wristbands will be checked.
Wristbands are $40 at the gate.
All sales are final. No refunds,
exchanges or returns.
*
Hurry In!
These Wont Last!
Jct. Hwys. 75 & 160
Independence, KS
800.659.4020
*$250 Value
2701 North State St.
Iola, KS
800.367.2187
www.omalleyequipment.com
Offer valid on purchases made between August 1, 2018 to October 26, 2018. 152For consumer, ag, or commercial use only. Eligibility for the down
payment offer is limited to highly qualified customers and scheduled monthly payments will be required. $500 off and 20% down plus 0% APR for
84 Months and $500 implement bonus on Compact Utility Tractors. Implement Bonus is in addition to Low Rate financing and requires the purchase of 2 or more qualifying John Deere or Frontier implements. $11.90 per month for every $1,000 financed. cSubject to approved installment
credit with John Deere Financial. Available at participating U.S. dealers. Prices and models may vary by dealer. Offer available on new equipment
only. Prices and savings in U.S. dollars.
Offer valid on qualifying purchases made between August 1, 2018 to October 26, 2018. 27Interest will be
charged to your account from the purchase date at 17.9% APR if the purchase balance is not paid in full
within 9 months or if your account is otherwise in default. @Subject to approved credit on a Revolving Plan
account, a service of John Deere Financial, f.s.b. For consumer use only. No down payment required.
Available at participating U.S. dealers. Prices and models may vary by dealer. Offers available on new
equipment. Prices and savings in U.S. dollars. Some restrictions apply, see dealer for details.
RAKE IN THE $AVINGS
RECEIVE
AN
EXTRA
15%
OFF
YOUR
OPTIONS!
4×10 QSI
QUALIFYING OPTIONS:
Entry Doors
Garage Doors
Windows
Cupolas
Horse Stalls
Wainscoting
Vented Overhangs
Drip Stop
Solex LT Insulation
Side Light Belt
Post Protectors
Liner Panel
Sliding Doors
Dutch Doors
& More
Excludes concrete, lean-tos, gutters, crew travel, freight, and site preparation.
Garages
Hobby Shops
Agricultural Barns
Horse Barns
Commercial
Residential
2×3
valleyBring
r your family and
help make Cornstock a success!
Offer expires September 30, 2018
SPECIALIZING IN COMPLETE
POST FRAME BUILDINGS
www.qualitystructures.com
Give us a call TODAY!
800-374-6988
6B
CLASSIFIED
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
Greeley – 3 bedroom, 2 bath
home, central air and heat,
W/D hookup, partial fenced
yard, carport, storage shed,
refrigeratior, stove. $650/
month with deposit and references. Available 1st of October.
No pets. Call (785) 867-3202.
sp11t2*
Stately 3 story Mansion in
Holton Ks! Features 9 bedrooms, 2 baths, Home features
original wood trim and floors,
radiator steam heat, large lot
and stone carriage house. Has
two staircases, one of which
leads to the third floor which
was the maids quarters. This
house also served as the town
hospital in the 1940s. This home
is in remarkable condition for
its age, but does need cosmetics. It just awaits your imagination! With Prairie band Casino
just a few miles away from
this property, it offers excellent bed and breakfast potential. Or make it your family
estate for generations to come.
Unbelievable price of $139,000!
Listed by Darrell Mooney,
Senior agent Pia Friend Realty.
For a private showing, call Pia
at 913 370 0431
mc20*yr*
There is money to be made
on this one! With a shortage of
Rental Units in the area , now
is your chance to cash in! 3
existing units in this historic
brick building, with plenty of
room to ad more apartments
and have retail space ! Or live in
the gorgeous 2400 sq ft open loft
on the second floor, and rent
the 2 studio apartments and
retail space on the first floor to
make the payments. Located in
McLouth Ks, which is 30 min
North of Lawrence , and 30 min
West Of Leavenworth. Building
is on major Hiway, and the possibilities are endless ! Hurry,
$89,900 Darrell Mooney, Pia
Friend Realty 913-370-0431
mc20*yr*
Secluded – 5 acre building site
(beautiful view) with installed,
paid for, water meter. 1/8 mile
S. of Hwy. 40 on E. 400 Rd. in
Douglas County. Easy access to
Topeka, Lawrence or KC. 70K.
Call (785) 841-3881 (offered for
sale out of an estate). *my22yr*
LiveHuntFish in rural
Anderson County, Ks Three
bedroom, two bath ranch style
house on 40 acres with great
outbuildings, pond and free
Internet, sandwiched between
two other parcels totalling
238.8 acres with 197 tillable,
additional in brush and woods
and full of game. Another 207
with 50-70 tillable, rest in hilly
woods, brush, prime for hunting with deer feeders in place
for years, metal building with
electric and well water. All an
hour from KC, Lawrence area.
To be sold in part or together. Contact Moshiri Realty
Company, Overland Park, Ks.,
(913) 239-8888.
*ja9t1*
Land for sale – 62 acres, 34
acres tillable, great building
site, good hunting. 7 miles East
of Burlington, Kansas. $2,400/
acre or best offer. (574) 3261724.
jy3*yr*
Owner will finance – 40 or 20
acres with 25 acre lake, rural
water, paved road, Hwy. 75 &
15th Road in Coffey County,
Ks, east side of road, north of
Burlington, Ks. Gene Owen.
(913) 669-1873
sp18*yr*
Owner will finance – 150
acres, Osage County, near
Overbrook. 205th & Stanley
Road. Fenced, pond, running
water, pipe corral, rural water,
deer and turkey. (913) 669-1873.
Gene Owen.
sp18*yr*
Meriden – 50 ac m/l, W side
Lake Perry on asphalt road,
close to marina & highway,
approximately 3.5 acres
trees, primarily native grass,
unimproved, rural waterline.
Very appealing homesite,
lots of game, adjoins Corp
of Engineers land. Call for
details. Sedlak Agency-Realtor,
Winchester, KS (913) 774-4444 or
(913) 683-5034.
*jn12y*
MOBILE HOMES
2015 Lexington Mobile
Home – 1296 sq. ft. 3 bedroom,
2 bath, partially furnished,
lightly lived in, front porch and
back deck included. Delivered
to your location within 40 miles
for $58,000. Call (785) 448-8014.
sp18t4
REAL ESTATE
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
1×3
schulte
2×2
jb
1×3
We have a job opportunity for the following position:
Coding Specialist
ICD-10 and CPT Coding experience required.
Rural Health Clinic Coding/Charging experience
preferred. Associates in Health Information
Technology or Coding Certification preferred.
See online posting for more details.
1×2
ROB
Library
Help Wanted
The Garnett Public Library is currently accepting
applications for a permanent part-time position.
The ideal candidate should have good customer
service skills, computer skills
and a love of books. Prior childrens
and young adult programming
experience preferred. Pick up a
complete job description and application
at the Garnett Public Library E.O.E.
Franklin County Auctions
2×31457 Hwy 59, Princeton, KS
Behind the Brand N Iron
fr cty auction
Sept. 29, 9:30 am
Regular Fall Sales
Every Saturday at 10 a.m.
Thomas Berger Johnson (1890-1968)
Works by Kansas and Other Mid-West Artists
Firewood, Hay, Farm Machinery, Trucks,
Tools and Farm Miscellaneous
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
Rod Harris (785) 242-5435
Mark Hamilton (785) 214-0560
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2×3
and co hosp
1×3
Check out our
Monthly Specials
(913) 594-2495
Soulis
2×2
Fine Art
kpa soluis
Auction
SERVICES
1×2
edg
ryter
1×2
AD
SoulisAuctions.com
816.697.3830
805 N. Maple Garnett (785) 448-3216
SERVICES
SERVICES
Free Fine
Art Evaluations
Warehouse/Delivery Person
2×2 Full or part time.
Box truck driving helpful.
bauams
Call Baumans or stop by
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
HELP WANTED
Anderson County Courthouse 2×3
Custodian/Maintenance
and co clerk Technician
This individual performs skilled and semi-skilled
maintenance work in the care of County facilities.
Work involves general upkeep on the building
interiors, exterior entrances, lighting, plumbing and
electrical, while keeping facilities in clean and orderly
condition. Applications or resumes will be accepted
in the County Clerks office through October 2, 2018.
Anderson County is an equal opportunity employer.
www.frcoauctions.com
SEPTEMBER
SPECIAL
2×4
30x40x10 for
$ 16,300.00
kpa yes
26 Ga. Steel Panels & Trim
Superior Quality Features:
1 10×8 Ins. Overhead
Door, 1 3 Entry Door,
1 3×3 Window w/ Shutters
12 Boxed Overhang,
2 Cupola w/ Weathervane
2×3
beckman
Outstanding Performance in
2×3
orv housekeeping
2×3
orv cert dietary
2×3
orv rn, cna am
GM Sales for all of Kansas
Eight
Want a new BOSS?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
CLASSIFIED
7B
Check our classied job listings!
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
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.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
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
HELP WANTED
1×2
AD
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
AUCTIONS
NOTICES
10 cases – of decorative glass
jars with stoppered tops, 15 oz
and 22 oz. Used in a former
customer candy operation.
For sale by the dozen, mix and
match if you want,. $10 per
case of 12. Photos on Lawrence
Craigslist. Call or text (785) 4483870.
jn2tf
Diesel Generator – HP
13123023, $3,750. (785) 448-6191.
nv14tf
40 Grade A Steel Cargo
Containers $2550.00 in Solomon
Ks. 20s 45s 48s & 53s also
available Call 785 655 9430 or go
online to Chuckhenry.com for
pricing, availability & Freight
estimates
Are you behind $10k or more
on your taxes? Stop wage &
bank levies, liens & audits,
unfiled tax returns, payroll
issues, & resolve tax debt Fast.
Call 855-462-2769
DISH TV Best Deal Ever! Free
Voice Remote & DVR Included!
www.dish.com Referral Code
VCD0019117934
A Place for Mom has helped
over a million families find
senior living. Our trusted local
advisors help solutions to your
unique needs at No Cost To
You! Call 855-973-9062
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
Oxygen – Anytime. Anywhere.
No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One
G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA
approved! Free info kit: 844359-3973
Were you an Industrial or
Construction Tradesman and
recently diagnosed with lung
cancer? You and your family
may be entitled to a Significant
Cash Award. Call 866-409-2142
for your risk free consultation.
Save on your Medicare
Supplement! Free quotes from
top providers. Excellent coverage. Call for a no obligation
quote to see how much you can
save! 855-587-1299
Sawmills from only $4397.00Make & Save Money with your
own bandmill- Cut lumber any
dimension. In stock ready to
ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.
NorwoodSawmills.com 800 5670404 Ext.300N
Viagra and Cialis Users!
Theres a cheaper alternative than high drugstore prices! 50 Pills special $99.00 free
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call now! 855-850-3904
September 29th – 10 am – 2765 SE
HWY 54 Eldorado KS – Trucks,
Mowers, Tools, and much
more. 40 year Accumulation
– Newcomauctions.bid – Jack
Newcom Realty & Auction 316742-3311
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tfn
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
oc17tf
1×2
1×2
k p a
wichita
train
AD
PETS
Jack Russell – pupppies, 8
weeks old, shots, 2 males left.
$150 each. (785) 817-2512. sp11t2*
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth Announcements
Business News
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
parkview
We have job opportunities awaiting you. Please
inquire online at www.parkviewheights.com in the
career center for Kansas to find the positions that are
available or give us a call at (785) 448-2434 to discuss
the positions.
RN/LPN full-time night position
CNA part-time and full-time positions available:
day, evening and night, every other weekend.
Its quick & easy!
101 N. Pine
Garnett, Ks.
(785) 448-2434
2×4
kpa qsi
2×4
kpa morton
EstateAuction
Tom Highberger Estate
Sat., Sept. 22 9:30 a.m.
2×5
15446 SW Arkansas Rd. Westphalia, KS
kurtz auction
2×4
and co hops
We have job opportunities for the following positions posted
online today. View online posting for detailed information
about these positions:
Registered Nurses in Float Pool, Med Surg, ED, or RLC
LPN or CNA in our Residential Living Center
Cook or Nutrition Services Aide
Patient Access Representative (registration)
Registered Nurse at Family Care Center
Housekeeping or Laundry Associate
Cardiac Sonographer in Radiology
Speech Therapist in Rehab
04 Silverado Z71 Ext cab 4 X4 118K miles; 99 Chevy 1500 Pkup
Ext cab 4 X 4 245 K miles; 98 HiJet Jumbo mini truck 4 X4; 1947
Willys Jeep (has been shedded, running); 04 Volvo SUV, needs
rep.; JD F1145 Industrial Mower 72 deck, dsl mtr, 1697 hrs; like
new 7 x 12 Bulldog tilt bed utility trailer; 3 Vintage Camping
trailers & 1 lg overhead pickup camper mounted to a trailer;
Older flat btm boat, trailer & trolling mtr; Lot hunting, camping & fishing gear; nice antique Oak furniture; Lg vintage Oak
back bar cabinet;good clean modern furniture, kitchen wares,&
household; lots antiques , collectibles, Oak wall phone, 62 pcs
Marcrest crock ware, Vintage Pyrex, old tools, primitives, large
lantern collection (some are marked); Old Rainbo bread sign;
Old Tractor books; Beer and beverage adv collectibles; Vintage
Squirt Clock; Portable storage bldg.; Tools & misc farm items;
LARGE AUCTION!!
Food served by St Teresa Altar Society.
Complete sale bill, terms,and lots of pictures
at www.kansasauctions.net/kurtz
Kurtz Auction & Realty Service
Auctioneers:
Darwin W. Kurtz 785-448-4152
Lyle Williams 785-229-5457
Laverne Yoder 785-489-2335
Happiness is… celebrating
your wedding anniversary
with a FREE announcement
and photo in the Review. Go
to www.garnett-ks.com and
click the form under Submit
News. Available FREE 24
hours/day!
mc1tf
Are you looking for a fulfilling,
meaningful
place to work?
2×3
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
2×4.5 yoder
Happiness is . . . submitting
your FREE wedding announcement ONLINE for publication in The Anderson County
Review. Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click the form
under Submit News. Fill in
the form and click SUBMIT.
Available FREE 24 hours/day
!
mc1tf
Happiness is . . . Running
your ad in the Reviews Oct. 9
total market circulation election edition for same price as
regular advertising – mailed
to subscribers AND non- subscribers! Call (785) 448–3121 to
place your ad.
sp11t5
GARAGE SALES
September 20, 21 & 22 Thursday & Friday 8-4,
Saturday, 8-noon. 105 Park
Plaza North, Apt 19. Furniture,
dishes, misc., s-m womens
clothes, bedroom set (queen
size)
sp18t1*
Friday & Saturday, 8:30 – 4:30.
3 miles west on 7th Street Rd.
Furniture, bikes, misc. sp18t1*
HAPPY ADS
2×4
AD
8B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 18, 2018
LOCAL
Westphalia 3rd & 4th graders share their PSRT met in Crest announces FFA
ideas on what to be cool means to them September Member of the Month
Twenty-one members and one
guest, Julie Turnipseed, new
Anderson County Economic
Development Director met Sept.
12, 2018 at the depot for the
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail monthly
meeting.
Bill Ratliff announced the
Ultra Marathon will be Oct. 27th
& 28th on the Prairie Spirit Rail
Trail. This year they have added
bike riders.
Members will meet to put up
scarecrows Wednesday evening,
Sept. 19th at 6:30 pm on the trail.
Members also discussed the
upcoming Halloween Haunted
House on October 31st.
The next regular meeting will
be October 10, 2018 at the depot
at 7:00 PM.
Ridley Black was named
September FFA Member of the
Month for Crest High Schol.
Black finished 9th place in
Food Science Team and is currently the Vice-President.
I joined FFA because
Makayla and Breyanna didnt
give me the option not too,
Black stated.
One of the memories that
Black states that she will never
forget is a trip to the mini-golf
course.
Fall Dinner & Bazaar
2×2
St
Johns
Chur
RAFFLE
BAKE SALE
COUNTRY STORE
St. Johns Church Greeley Sunday, Sept 23, 2018
Serving 11-2 Adults $10.00, 12 & under $6.00, Take out $10.00
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-18-18 / Photo Submitted
Westphalias third and
fourth grade classes are off to a
great start!
Among the many exciting
things that take place in our
day, I always take time for daily
read aloud, third and fourth
grade teacher Ms. Hazlett said.
This school year Westphalia
3rd graders started off with the
book How to be Cool in the
Third Grade written by Betsy
Duffey.
After completion of the
book, the students were asked to
share what Being Cool meant
to them, Hazlett added. Here
are some of their ideas, I hope
you enjoy!
I believe that being cool
just means being yourself. You
dont have to wear like cool
gear or cool clothes. Even if
someone says you are not cool,
dont believe them, believe in
yourself. Being you is being
cool!- Trowtt
I believe being cool means, if
you think that you are cool then
thats enough. You dont have
to have the money, clothes, or
even the coolest friends. Just
think you are cool! -Bree
I think that being cool
means being nice to people and
your family. Girls are cool!Cheyanne
I believe that being cool
means you have a cool family
and that being cool is being a
nice person.- Carly
I believe that being cool
means being yourself. You
dont need to have cool clothes.
You dont need to have another
name just because you want to
be cool.- Kathy
MENU: Turkey & Dressing, Ham, Chicken & Noodles, Sauerkraut,
Potatoes & Gravy, Green Beans, Bread, Apple Salad, Pie & Drinks
Four
Color
Printing
EVERYONE WELCOME!
Parish Hall Handicap Accessible
P.O. Box 85 Fittstown, OK 74842
www.dunnsfishfarm.com
800-433-2950
Now available at
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
not just the purchase price
when choosing their next ride.
AAAs annual analysis
found demand for sedans has
slipped as American appetite
shifts to SUVs and pickup
trucks. As a result, depreciation costs of these once-popular vehicles increased up to
13 percent as compared to last
year. Electric and hybrid vehicles, however, have seen a gain
in popularity with 20 percent
of Americans saying they will
likely go electric for their next
vehicle purchase, up from 15
percent the previous year. This
year, these vehicles also saw
a dip in depreciation and offer
many cost benefits such as
lower repair and maintenance
bills, making going green a
more affordable choice than in
years past.
Buyers often only give priority to purchase price and
monthly payment when choosing a new car, sometimes
selecting a vehicle based on
the best deal available. The
length of car ownership, however, is of equal importance.
Consumers who plan to keep
a vehicle for only a few years
should be cautious of deep discounts and incentives offered
by automakers and dealers.
These are often designed to sell
less popular models and directly influence depreciation. Low
down payments and extended
finance terms can also have a
similar effect.
Stretching a car loan over
five, six or even seven years
may be an effective way to
lower payments, but owners
may quickly find themselves
owing more than the vehicle is
worth.
Leasing is similarly affected
since payments are based in
part on the projected residual
value of the car at the end of the
lease, serving as a good indicator of which models experi-
2×3
Dunns Fish
Farm
We furnish hauling containers! Live Delivery Guaranteed!
Delivery of Black Crappie, Channel Catfish, Bass,
Hybrid Bluegill, Coppernose Bluegill, Redear Bream,
Fathead Minnows, and Triploid Grass Carp
NOW AVAILABLE FOR POND & LAKE STOCKING!
AAA: New cars lose $3,000 annually from this single expense
TOPEKA, Kan. Sep. 13,
2018 AAAs 2018 Your Driving
Costs study reveals the largest expense associated with
purchasing a new car is something many drivers fail to consider depreciation. In fact, it
accounts for almost 40 percent
of the cost of owning a new
vehicle more than $3,000 per
year and is influenced by a
number of factors, including
shifting consumer preferences. AAA urges car buyers to
think about both market trends
and length of ownership when
shopping for their next vehicle
purchase.
New vehicles offer the
latest designs, cutting-edge
technologies and warranties
that offer peace of mind, said
John Nielsen, AAAs managing director of Automotive
Engineering and Repair. But,
car owners that like to change
vehicles frequently should be
thinking about the resale value
ence higher or lower depreciation. Since resale value is not
a factor at the end of the lease
period, buyers who prefer less
popular models or only want
a vehicle for a short time, may
consider leasing a more viable
option.
The secret to minimizing
depreciation costs? continued
Nielsen. Keep your car for a
long time and keep it well-maintained or even consider buying
a quality, pre-owned vehicle.
AAAs Your Driving Costs
found the average cost to own
and operate a new vehicle in
2018 is $8,849 per year. The
figure is calculated based on
the cost of fuel, maintenance,
repairs, insurance, license/registration/taxes, depreciation
and loan interest. The study
examined 45 top-selling 2018
model-year vehicles across the
following nine categories.
Discounts/Special Deliveries on large orders!
Thursday, September 27 8-9 AM
Garnett Beachner Grain, Inc. 804 E. 6th Ave.
Turtle Traps, Fish Feeders, Fish Traps! Decorative Fountains, Aerators,
Windmill Aerators! Vegetation Control, Pond Fertilizers!
PLACING ORDERS A WEEK PRIOR IS RECOMMENDED!
To place an order or for more information
call one of our Aquatic Consultants.
CONTRACTORS
Guide
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
Check this handy directory
of contracting companies
before you take on that
home or business project.
AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING
(620) 363-4327
GLASS
Quality Service For
Over 20 Years.
Serving Anderson
& Franklin Counties.
BUILDING MATERIALS
SEPTIC TANKS / SYSTEMS
Providing quality
products and service
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
Licensed Electricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm
1-800-433-2950
Fax: 1-580-777-2899
Get the job done right!
6×9.5
Contractors
Guide
GUTTERING
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTORS
Having Breyanna hit me
in the head with a golf club
while mini golfing is a memory
I will never forget while being
in FFA, Black added.
Ms. Boehm, Agriculture
Education Instructor for Crest
High School, stated Ridley has
gone above and beyond as VP
getting sponsors for our FFA
t-shirts. She has been a great
role model for our incoming
members.
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
D&S Sanitation LLC
Brian Falk
LIME & LIMESTONE
SIDING & WINDOWS
GAS – PROPANE
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
Construction Supply
Contractors, Residential & Farm
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
410 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-7106
FLOORING
CONST. SITES
COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
N. NIGHWAY 59 GARNETT
(785) 448-5512 or toll free 1-877-592-2743
www.mfaoil.com
FUEL PROPANE LUBES
Visit The Anderson County Review online
at www.garnett-ks.com.
If you would like to advertise your business in this directory
call Stacey at 785-448-3121, or email review@garnett-ks.com.

